A mixture of hydrogen and oxygen would consist of separate H2 and O2 molecules. The hydrogen and oxygen would retain their own properties. The most common compound of hydrogen and oxygen is water. In it the two elements are combined into molecules of H2O, which has its own set of properties distinct from those of hydrogen or oxygen.
The compound is water - H2O; the molecule of hydrogen is H2.
A mixture of hydrogen and oxygen consists of particles of both elements physically combined, maintaining their individual properties. In contrast, a compound containing hydrogen and oxygen forms chemical bonds to create a distinct substance with unique properties, such as water (H2O).
A mixture of hydrogen and oxygen would consist of separate H2 and O2 molecules. The hydrogen and oxygen would retain their own properties. The most common compound of hydrogen and oxygen is water. In it the two elements are combined into molecules of H2O, which has its own set of properties distinct from those of hydrogen or oxygen.
A pure compound is made up entirely of one substance that has a single chemical property. A mixture is made up of two or more pure compounds with distinct chemical properties.
Blood is a mixture containing plasma and blood cells.
Compounds and mixtures are similar in that they both consist of two or more substances combined together. However, they differ in their composition and properties: a compound is formed when elements chemically bond in fixed ratios, resulting in a substance with distinct properties that differ from its constituent elements. In contrast, a mixture involves physical combinations of substances that retain their individual properties and can vary in composition.
A mole of oxygen and a mole of hydrogen have the same quantity of particles, which is approximately 6.022 x 1023 atoms or molecules. However, they differ in their atomic composition, with oxygen having 16 times the atomic mass of hydrogen.
The composition of Our Gas Giants may resemble that of Our Sun, yet they have not the Power Of Ignition! The rocky composition of the inner planets bears no resemblance at all. Stars are mostly Hydrogen. the core of stars is under so much pressure that the Hydrogen undergoes fusion into Heliun and a few heavier elements. Planets are too small for this to happen.
The properties of hydrogen chloride differ markedly from both hydrogen and chlorine, and you cannot see either of the original elements in the hydrogen chloride liquid. In contrast, if you simply mix hydrogen and chlorine in a flask you will still have a gas which is coloured yellowish by the chlorine.
As far as the scientific explanation goes something that is pure is free from every type of impurities. Compounds are the mixture of different substances which makes them containing more then one single material.
Isotopes (of hydrogen) differ in the number of neutrons in the nucleus of the atoms.
A mixture of things that differ in some way.