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The strength of a solution may be described as a percentage or volume, where 1% hydrogen peroxide releases 3.3 volumes of oxygen during decomposition.Thus, a 3% solution is equivalent to 10 volume and a 6% solution to 20 volume, etc. Answer taken from Wikipedia 19/01/2009
This means that for every volume of hydrogen peroxide used, 20 volumes of oxygen will be produced. For example, if 1 ml of hydrogen peroxide is used/decomposes, 20 ml of oxygen will be formed.
The reaction between hydrogen and oxygen to form water is given by the equation: 2H2 + O2 -> 2H2O. This means that 2 volumes of hydrogen react with 1 volume of oxygen to produce 2 volumes of water vapor. Therefore, from 10 volumes of hydrogen and 5 volumes of oxygen, 10 volumes of water vapor can be produced.
If you have a solution that is 50% water and 50% hydrogen peroxide, you would have equal volumes of each component. So if you have 1 liter of this solution, you would have 0.5 liters of water and 0.5 liters of hydrogen peroxide.
Striped volumes do not provide fault tolerance.
Hydrogen peroxide is a liquid compound and does not have volumes in the same way that gases or solids do. It is typically sold and measured by its concentration in percentages, such as 3% or 6% hydrogen peroxide.
To create a 12% solution from a 9% solution, you can mix the 9% peroxide with a concentrated hydrogen peroxide solution to increase the concentration. The specific volumes needed would depend on the concentrations of the starting solutions and the final volume desired. It's important to handle concentrated hydrogen peroxide with caution and use appropriate safety measures.
Neither. They are identical volumes.
No. They're equal volumes.
i dunno homie g carbon, hydrogen, and oxygencarbon, hydrogen, and oxygencarbon, hydrogen, and oxygencarbon, hydrogen, and oxygencarbon, hydrogen, and oxygencarbon, hydrogen, and oxygenvvcarbon, hydrogen, and oxygenvvcarbon, hydrogen, and oxygenvcarbon, hydrogen, and oxygencarbon, hydrogen, and oxygencarbon, hydrogen, and oxygenv
Don't try it because if you have 1 volume of oxygen to 2 volumes of hydrogen, it is explosive!
Neither. They're equal volumes.