It is neither and EXAMPLE Nor a MIXTURE.
It is an elemental gas , found in the Periodic Table in position No. .1.
Hydrogen gas is not an example of a mixture as it consists of only hydrogen molecules. It is a pure substance.
You can separate hydrogen from a mixture of hydrogen and hydrogen chloride gas by passing the mixture through a chemical reaction chamber where the hydrogen chloride reacts with a metal such as zinc or magnesium, forming metal chloride and releasing hydrogen gas. The metal chloride can then be removed, leaving behind pure hydrogen gas.
No. Hydrogen is an element, which forms the molecule H2. Elements and homogeneous molecules (molecules that are all of one kind) are not considered mixtures; mixtures are by definition heterogeneous. An example is air, which is a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, ozone, water vapor, and dozens of other elements and compounds.
No, the hydrogen and oxygen elements in water are combined in molecules and so are a compound rather than a mixture. Air is a good example of a homogeneous mixture of mainly nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and water vapor and hence it has different types of molecules thoroughly mixed together rather than chemically combined. Salty water is another good example.
No, hydrogen chloride is a pure substance, not a mixture. It is a compound composed of hydrogen and chlorine atoms bonded together in a fixed ratio.
Hydrogen gas is not an example of a mixture as it consists of only hydrogen molecules. It is a pure substance.
It is an example of a compound. An extremely dangerous compound.
H2O is an example of a mixture. It can be broken back down to its original parts 2 parts of Hydrogen, and 1 part of Oxygen.
The most abundant example of a gas gas mixture is the air we breathe! It is a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, water, argon, carbon dioxide and many trace gases!
No, It is a chemical compound.
no, it is a compound
No. Water is a compound of hydrogen and oxygen, not a mixture.
CArbohydrate is a mixture of Hydrogen and corbon examples would be Coal Crude oil
Hydrogen is not a mixture at all. It is an element and therefore a pure substance.
You can separate hydrogen from a mixture of hydrogen and hydrogen chloride gas by passing the mixture through a chemical reaction chamber where the hydrogen chloride reacts with a metal such as zinc or magnesium, forming metal chloride and releasing hydrogen gas. The metal chloride can then be removed, leaving behind pure hydrogen gas.
No. Hydrogen is an element, which forms the molecule H2. Elements and homogeneous molecules (molecules that are all of one kind) are not considered mixtures; mixtures are by definition heterogeneous. An example is air, which is a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, ozone, water vapor, and dozens of other elements and compounds.
Fractional distillation of the liquefied mixture is one possible method.