no
Sodium peroxide has the molecular structure of Na2O2(s); it is a solid at room temperature
Hydrogen peroxide has the molecular structure of H2O2(l); it is a liquid at room temperature
Sodium carbonate peroxyhydrate (also called sodium percarbonate) is not the same as hydrogen peroxide -- but when it is dissolved in water, it releases hydrogen peroxide and sodium carbonate ("washing soda"). The sodium carbonate increases the bleaching action of the hydrogen peroxide. It also acts as a water softener, which makes any added detergent more effective. Sodium percarbonate is commonly used as a non-chlorine laundry bleach.
Yes, it contains the ordinary peroxide ion attached to two hydrogen ions.
Both are compounds consisting entirely of hydrogen and oxygen. Water is H2O. Hydrogen peroxide is H2O2.
No, (hydrogen) peroxide and ammonia are two different chemicals.
No, Hydrogen peroxide is a compound the chemical formula H2O2. Hydrogen and element and is shown as either H or H2. Hydrogen is a gas at room temperature while hydrogen peroxide is a liquid, and is used in hospitals.
No - sodium Hydroxide is NaOH and is an alkali. Hydrogen Peroxide is H2O2 and is an oxidizer
Sodium carbonate peroxyhydrate (also called sodium percarbonate) is not the same as hydrogen peroxide -- but when it is dissolved in water, it releases hydrogen peroxide and sodium carbonate ("washing soda"). The sodium carbonate increases the bleaching action of the hydrogen peroxide. It also acts as a water softener, which makes any added detergent more effective. Sodium percarbonate is commonly used as a non-chlorine laundry bleach.
yes
Yes, it contains the ordinary peroxide ion attached to two hydrogen ions.
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.
Both are compounds consisting entirely of hydrogen and oxygen. Water is H2O. Hydrogen peroxide is H2O2.
No, (hydrogen) peroxide and ammonia are two different chemicals.
These are two different things. Vinegar is Acetic Acid. Hydrogen peroxide is H2O2, and is used ( in a dilute solution) as an anti-bacterial.
No, Hydrogen peroxide is a compound the chemical formula H2O2. Hydrogen and element and is shown as either H or H2. Hydrogen is a gas at room temperature while hydrogen peroxide is a liquid, and is used in hospitals.
They are the same chemical.
Natrium is another name for sodium (thats where Na comes from)... so it will be the same as sodium oxide not sodium perocide.
the way you ask the question it would be HO, but it can't happen that way, HO is really H2O2 or hydrogen peroxide. this is my answer. However, the more common compound is water, or H2O. the above is not part of my answer and is wrong. HO and H2O are diffrerent things. HO does not really occur naturally, it occurs as H2O2 or hydrogen peroxide and while it is similar to water, it is NOT water, ingest enough and you will DIE. Hydrogen peroxide, H2O2 and water H2O are DIFFERENT. what you say is like saying carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide are the same thing, or aqueous ammonia and anhydrous ammonia are the dame thing. Hydrogen peroxide (H202) and dihydrogen monoxide (h20) are NOT the same thing.