The molecular formula for Hydrogen peroxide is H2O2. It has 2 hydrogen and 2 oxygen.
Another way of writing it is H-O-O-H.
Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) contains two atoms of hydrogen and two atoms of oxygen for a total of four atoms.
Water has a higher percentage of hydrogen by mass than does hydrogen peroxide, because the latter has equal numbers of hydrogen and oxygen atoms while the former has twice as many hydrogen atoms as oxygen atoms.
Interesting question. Balanced equation. H2 + O2 >> H2O2 ( let's find moles and limiting reactant ) 10 O2 molecules (1 mole/6.022 X 10 ^23) = 1.66 X 10^-23 moles O2 same for H2, so one to one and reaction is driven by above moles, but use O2 for convenience. actually, as all is one to one, you get back 10 molecules H2O2 anyway 1.66 X 10^-23 X 6.022 X 10^23 = 9.99, or 10 molecules of H2O2
We get hydrogen peroxide, with chemical formula H2O2. Each molecule consists of two hydrogen and two oxygen atoms. Hydrogen peroxide is a colourless liquid at room temperature and decomposes at high temperatures to water and oxygen gas.
Hydrogen peroxide has covalent bonds between the atoms. The atoms are held together by those covalent bonds. There are van der Waals and dipole-dipole forces between the molecules.
1,204428358.1023 atoms of hydrogen
Hydrogen peroxide has two atoms of hydrogen and oxygen.
Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) contains two atoms of hydrogen and two atoms of oxygen for a total of four atoms.
Hydrogen peroxide is a molecule because it is a combination of atoms with a bond.
H2O2 is the formula for hydrogen peroxide.
Hydrogen peroxide is a molecule because it is a combination of atoms with a bond.
If you mean hydrogen peroxide, it's 2 hydrogen atoms and two oxygen atoms. H2 O2
Many, many compounds contain either hydrogen atoms, oxygen atoms, or both. Far too many to list here, in fact.Most prominently water and hydrogen peroxide both contain nothing but oxygen and hydrogen atoms.
Peroxide is an compound that can be a part of another chemical to form a molecule. Hydrogen peroxide is two hydrogen atoms attached to a peroxide molecule, forming hydrogen peroxide. Peroxide itself (O2) only exists as molecular oxygen when it is not attached to another chemical.
Water is H2O and hydrogen peroxide is H2O2 ; both of these molecules have two hydrogen atoms. It is the number of oxygen atoms which varies.
Far from it. Water contains one oxygen atom with two hydrogen atoms bonded to it. Hydrogen peroxide has two oxygen atoms each with its own hydrogen atom.Right now you're like, "well, so what?" The two oxygen atoms are connected with a single bond - the "peroxide group." Peroxides are very unstable and energetic. Pure hydrogen peroxide can be used as rocket fuel.
No, hydrogen peroxide is H2O2, meaning in each molecule there are two hydrogen atoms and two oxygen atoms. Water is H2O, meaning that each molecules has two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. Hydrogen peroxide has different chemical and physical properties from water. It is more acidic, more viscous, and has a higher boiling point. It decomposes easily into water and oxygen and is a strong oxidizer.