No. He discovered hydrogen and oxygen, but those elements have been around since pretty much the beginning of the universe.
Antoine Lavoisier. However, he developed the names from the Classical Roots. Oxygen = 'Acid Generator'. Hydrogen = 'Water Generator'. NB Many modern scientific names are developed from their Classical Greekm and Latin roots.
In Greek, Hydro means "water", and Gen means "create." So hydrogen means "water-making." And it takes 2 hydrogen atoms combined with an Oxygen atom to create water.
Lavoisier supposed that water is formed from hydrogen and oxygen.
Water.
which scientist suggested that acids contain hydrogon
Antoine Lavoisier did not split water; instead, he is known for his contributions to chemistry, particularly for identifying and naming oxygen and hydrogen as elements in water. He demonstrated that water was a compound of hydrogen and oxygen by carefully capturing and measuring the gases produced when water was decomposed.
Carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen can combine to create a variety of compounds, but one common example is glucose. Glucose is a simple sugar that consists of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms in a specific ratio.
Antoine Lavoisier named hydrogen in 1783.
Oxygen typically forms two bonds with hydrogen to create water (H2O).
When hydrogen and oxygen combine, they undergo a chemical reaction that forms water. This reaction involves the bonding of hydrogen and oxygen atoms to create water molecules, with two hydrogen atoms bonding with one oxygen atom to form a water molecule (H2O).
Antoine Lavoisier
gas