A water molecule (H2O) has 10 protons.
No, a water molecule contains the same number of protons and electrons. In a water molecule (H2O), there are 10 protons (2 from each hydrogen and 8 from oxygen) and 10 electrons (2 from each hydrogen and 8 from oxygen).
Hydrogen: 1 Proton, 0 Neutrons Oxygen: 8 Protons, 8 Neutrons Water: 9 Protons, 8 Neutrons. Yy
Water isn't an atom, its a molecule. One molecule of water is two hydrogen atoms (1 proton each) and one oxygen atom (8 protons each). Thus the total protons is 1+1+8 = 10 protons in one molecule of water.
The number of neutrons will vary depending on the isotopes of hydrogen and oxygen in the molecule. The number of protons and electrons will be 10 each in every molecule.
10 protons, 8 (or more, up to 14) neutrons
No, the electrons and protons in the atoms make a difference.
One normal water molecule has 2 protons plus the quantity of 8 protons and 8 neutrons. That it is a total of 18 nucleons. As all nucleons have 3 valence quarks, then there are 54 quarks in 1 normal water molecule.
There are 8 protons in an oxygen atom. There are two oxygen atoms in an oxygen molecule. Therefore, there are 16 protons in an oxygen molecule
In the molecule, protons that have the same chemical environment are considered equivalent.
A water molecule has two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. The proton, neutron and electron count of them are 1,0,1 and 8,8,8 respectively. Therefore a molecule of water has 10 protons, 8 neutrons and 10 electrons.
1 for each hydrogen and 8 in the oxygen nucleus = 10
The molecule under consideration has two allylic protons.