When water splits, hydrogen gas and oxygen gas are formed.
Hydrogen. For example: Iron + water = rust + Hydrogen - Fe + (2)O2 = FeO2 + H2
When hydrogen gas passed over heated cupric oxide, the hydrogen is oxidized and displaces copper from the copper oxide as metallic copper, because hydrogen is higher than copper in the electromotive series. Water vapor is also produced by the reaction.
when you put the magnesuim in th test tube and you put an irritant in then you mix and hold the top hard to collect the gas and it makes a little sound pop.the gas is called hydrogen. hopes this heps
If you add thermal energy to a mixture of oxygen gas and hydrogen gas, water will be produced in the form of water vapor.
Hydrogen chloride is soluble in water, so attempting to collect it over water would result in a significant amount of the gas being lost as it goes into an aqueous solution that will soon become dangerously acidic.
HCl reacts with water to form hydrochloric acid - eventually you would form "fuming" hydrochloric acid at concentrations over 35%. Collection over water is not a practical method of collecting the gas.
It is called wet hydrogen gas because it is collected over water.
Wet hydrogen is collected over a water surface.
When water splits, hydrogen gas and oxygen gas are formed.
No, the water go over to gas form and is still water, but it is not vincible. H2O is water. Hydrogen + oxygen
Hydrogen and oxygen are the products of electroysis of water .
Hydrogen. For example: Iron + water = rust + Hydrogen - Fe + (2)O2 = FeO2 + H2
Collect the gas bubbles and try to ignite the gas. If it burns with a pop, it's hydrogen. If it puts the flame out it's carbon dioxide.
Hydrogen gas
Yes. Burning hydrogen gas in air produces water vapor.
Light a wooden splint and hold it in some of the unknown gas(which is supposedly hydrogen). If there is a loud "pop" sound, then it is hydrogen. there is a very quick and simple way to do this you have to trap the gas in side a test tube but make sure it is half full of water, trap the gas and if when you turn the test tube upside down and the water stays in the same place the bottom of the tube (which would now be top) then you have "H" HYDROGEN