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As each water molecule contains one atom of Oxygen and two atoms of Hydrogen you would expect electrolysis of water to produce twice as much Hydrogen as Oxygen.
yes it does, as ice is the frozen state of water and water's chemical formula is h2o, where "h" is hydrogen and "o" is oxygen, but the chemical properties of hydrogen are not same as in "h2" cause it has been reacted with oxygen and lost its original chemical properties as single atom bond....
2H2 + O2 ---------------> 2H2O for every 2 moles of hydrogen that reacts, 2 moles of water are produced, thus a 1:1 ratio of water produced to hydrogen reacted. So:- 2.5 moles of hydrogen reacted will produce 2.5 moles of water
The hydrogen peroxide is both oxidized and reduced, to produce water and elemental oxygen.
As one molecule of water is composed of two atoms of Hydrogen to one atom of oxygen electrolysis of water should produce twice as much Hydrogen as it does Oxygen.
Oxygen
Oxygen
If it reacted with oxygen then it would form water
The Hydrogen will burn fiercely with a lambent blue flame and water will be produced.
The produce water by direct combination when hydrogen is burnt in oxygen.
Water. When you put electrodes into water and pass a current, you produce hydrogen and oxygen gasses.
water
They are both diatomic gases. Hydrogen will explode in oxygen to produce water.
The reaction between oxygen and hydrogen produce water.
It can be produced by electrolysis of water. Which disassociates the Hydrogen and Oxygen molecules.
It is a reversible chemical change. Hydrogen and oxygen can be easily reacted to produce water - and if you're REALLY good at trapping the H2 and O2 molecules that form when you separate the water, you can produce as much water as you started with. There are a few other reactions that are reversible - NaOH + HCl comes to mind, but please don't do it. Most reactions are irreversible; if you react rennet with milk to produce cheese curds, you can't turn the curds back into milk and rennet.
No, Water is a compound of Hydrogen and Oxygen, which are elements, but when reacted together: 2H2 + O2 = H20