no. they use covalent bonding which is where they share electrons.
When you burn hydrogen and oxygen, the molecules combine to form water (H2O).
When you burn hydrogen, it combines with oxygen to produce water as a byproduct. This process releases energy in the form of heat and light.
physical
When hydrogen and oxygen combine to form water, water is a product of the reaction.
Sodium will react with water by breaking the bonds between the hydrogen and oxygen, disassociating the hydrogen and oxygen and releasing them as free gasses, and in the process also releasing large amounts of energy in the form of heat, which is quite sufficient to ignite the hydrogen, such that the hydrogen and oxygen will burn at a high temperature. The result looks like the sodium is causing the water to burn.
When hydrogen and oxygen combine to form water, water is a product of the reaction.
Water is H2O. 2 hydrogen atoms and 1 oxygen atom. Water is not formed when you mix hydrogen and oxygen. An explosive mixture of hydrogen and oxygen is formed. When you burn hydrogen in oxygen, the resulting compound is water. When you boil water the result is steam, or water vapor. Boiling does NOT separate the hydrogen and oxygen. An electrical current is needed to separate the hydrogen and oxygen. CAUTION: Do NOT put salt in the water to speed up the electrolysis of water. It changes the products. instead of hydrogen and oxygen, you get hydrogen, chlorine (gas), and sodium hydroxide. The last two are very poisonous.
No, water is H2O therefore it has two hydrogens and one oxygen.
Hydrogen and oxygen are the reactants and water is the product.
Hydrogen and oxygen (H2O) form water. So there is one Hydrogen atom and 2 Oxygen atoms to make a water molecule.
When you burn hydrogen sulfide (H2S), it reacts with oxygen to form sulfur dioxide (SO2) and water (H2O). The sulfur dioxide produced has a pungent smell and can be harmful to the environment.
No. Simply mixing hydrogen and oxygen will not get you water. You must burn the mixture.