No it cant, A secondary reaction takes place and it splits into Chloride gas and hydrogen. :) Heaven Miller Mulberry Middle 7th
Water molecule
Yes. Water can be split into hydrogen and oxygen by electrolysis. The hydrogen that results is flammable.
molecules
The thylakoid space uses photolysis to break water into hydrogen ions and oxygen.
They are split into oxygen and hydrogen.
They are split into oxygen and hydrogenThey are split into oxygen and hydrogen
Water molecule
Hydrogen molecules and oxygen molecules can be easily split by what electrolysis. This is the process which is used to breakdown water.
Yes. Water can be split into hydrogen and oxygen by electrolysis. The hydrogen that results is flammable.
molecules
When you split water you form hydrogen and oxygen gas. The gases are the bubbles.
Yes. You cannot get water from hydrogen alone. You need oxygen. Since oxygen is a part of the atmosphere, simply burning hydrogen in air will give you water vapor. Passing an electric current through water will split it back into hydrogen and oxygen.
Hydrogen is generally produced by electrolysis of water, where electricity is used to split it into its component atoms: Hydrogen and oxygen
If water is being split into hydrogen and oxygen then a change of state (phase change) will occur if the water is in liquid form and the hydrogen and oxygen are evolved as gases. If water vapor is being split, then obviously no change of state occurs. Conversely, solid water in the form of ice could be split into hydrogen and oxygen gas, also undergoing a phase change.
There isn't a chemical process that separates oxygen and hydrogen in water. To split the water into hydrogen and oxygen you need to perform electrolysis on pure water. Hydrogen gas will be given off at the cathode (- end) and oxygen will be given off at the anion (+ end)
Oxygen and hydrogen are the two ellements that make up water.
hydrogen and oxygen.