Vinegar itself is not a compound. It is a mixture of acetic acid and water, the acetic acid being the active ingredient. The formula for acetic acid is C2H5O2, so it has 2 atoms of carbon, 5 of hydrogen, and 2 of oxygen.
3 Hydrogen and 2 Oxygen
12 carbon 4 hydrogen and 2 oxygen
it has 2.3 hydorgen and 4
Vinegar is a mixture (not a chemical compound) of acetic acid and water. There is no vinegar molecule. The chemical formula of acetic acid is CH3COOH -- 4 Hydrogen atoms, 2 Carbon and 2 Oxygen, and water is, of course, H2O.
Vinegar itself is not a compound. It is a mixture of acetic acid and water, the acetic acid being the active ingredient. The formula for acetic acid is C2H5O2, so it has 2 atoms of carbon, 5 of hydrogen, and 2 of oxygen.
There is a total of 3 hydrogen atoms in a molecule of vinegar.
There are three types of atoms in acetic acid (or vinegar). They are carbon (C), hydrogen (H) and oxygen (O).
Hydrogen peroxide has two atoms of hydrogen and oxygen.
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.
Vinegar itself is not a compound. It is a mixture of acetic acid and water, the acetic acid being the active ingredient. The formula for acetic acid is C2H5O2, so it has 2 atoms of carbon, 5 of hydrogen, and 2 of oxygen.
A total of two hydrogen atoms can bond to a single oxygen atom.
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.