No. Water is a compound of hydrogen and oxygen, not a mixture.
No. When in the form of water, hydrogen and oxygen form a compound, which is a pure substance.
Ascorbic acid is a compound mixture. It's made up of 6 carbon atoms, 8 hydrogen atoms and 6 oxygen atoms. Cabon, hydrogen and oxygen are elements.
Dry salt - is a compound of sodium and chlorine atoms. If you add it to water, it then mixes with the atoms of oxygen and hydrogen.
No, It is a chemical compound.
Yes indeed you can combine oxygen and hydrogen chemically to form water, simply by burning hydrogen in oxygen or air - two atoms of hydrogen combine with one atom of oxygen to form H2O - (although strictly speaking, in the context of chemistry, the water so produced would not necessarily be a "mixture").
The attraction of hydrogen and oxygen atoms in a compound is referred to as a hydrogen bond. The bond between hydrogen and oxygen is what makes up water, also known as H2O.
air is not a mixture. it is a compound. it is made up of 1 oxygen atom nd 2 hydrogen atoms
H2O (hydrogen & oxygen).
Hydrogen peroxide has two atoms of hydrogen and oxygen.
H20 is the molecular composition of water. Two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. The hydrogen atoms are pulled to the oxygen atom through forces called hydrogen bonding.
No, because the hydrogen atoms are slightly positive and the oxygen is slightly negative they are attracted to each other by something called hydrogen bonds. It actually gives the water a sticky quality called cohesion.
The number of hydrogen atoms is twice the number of oxygen atoms. Glucose is C6H12O6, so there are 12 hydrogen atoms for every 6 oxygen atoms in a molecule.