Since water and carbon dioxide are both compounds which contain oxygen, it is possible to obtain oxygen from either, but you get a different residue depending upon which compound is the source of the oxygen. Take the oxygen out of water and you are left with hydrogen gas; take the oxygen out of carbon dioxide and you are left with carbon, which is a black solid. It is easy to spot the difference between hydrogen and carbon.
You can tell that water is not a simple mixture of hydrogen and oxygen because they cannot be separated by mechanical means. That shows that water is a chemical compound of hydrogen and oxygen.
Water is hydrogen and oxygen; one part hydrogen to two parts oxygen (H2O). Otherwise, it wouldn't be water. You might want to try to word your question differently, because it doesn't really make sense.
You can get CO2 probes which detect and measure the amount of carbon dioxide in the air
Water is a liquid and carbon dioxide is a gas.
Water is a liquid and carbon dioxide is a gas
Water itself is not on the periodic table of elements because it is a compound, however as you probably know, the chemical equation of water is H2O. That means there are 2 atoms of hydrogen and 1 oxygen atom in each molecule of water. Both hydrogen and oxygen can be both found on the periodic table.
First, you need to know the meaning of compound. It is a pure substance composed of two or more elements that are chemically combined. Table salt - sodium and chlorine Water - hydrogen and oxygen Sugar - carbon, hydrogen and oxygen Carbon dioxide - Carbon and oxygen Baking soda - Sodium, hydrogen, carbon and oxygen
Since hydrogen is a gas, we would need more information to answer it. As chance wrote, you will need twice as much hydrogen as oxygen. However, in order to know what the volume of that hydrogen is, we also need to know the temperature and pressure so that we can use the universal gas law to get the answer.
That would be the water. Light form the sun is used to split water into hydrogen and oxygen. Oxygen, as we know, is released as a waste product that we use. Hydrogen is then carried to another series of reactions to create energy for the plant.
a molecule for water. you know, 1 hydrogen 2 oxygen? And if you were wondering smaller... is an atom
When hydrogen and oxygen are kindled in the right quantities, then we mostly don't call the product a mixture. Rather we call it a compound. The most usual compound of hydrogen and oxygen is water. Its not important that the compound should have the properties of its constituting elements. If we that water as an example, then we all know that water is a non supporter of combustion whereas hydrogen and oxygen are highly inflammable gases.
First You Have To Know The Water Formula i.e H2O.This Is A Mixture Of Hydrogen And Oxygen This Is Done By God.
I think, no. We need oxygen and hydrogen to make water so with only oxygen and no hydrogen we would have no water and life as we know it cannot exist without water
Think of this, and it might help.Examples of mixtures are Water w/ Sand, which is basically sand inside water. And etc.Examples of compounds are Water, which is 2 Hydrogen molecules and 1 Oxygen molecule. And etc.Since Oxygen and Hydrogen are both elements of the Periodic Table, then take a guess since you know the basics. Does a mixture contain more than one kind of element? (Yes!)
A hydrate is a compound that has to contain water, when other chemical compounds can be composed of anything. People this is SO easy. KNOW YOUR FREAKIN FACTS!
The chemical formula of water is H2O: hydrogen and oxygen, if you want to know this.
Water (H2O)Water is composed of two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen. We know this because hydrogen (H) has a 2 after it, meaning there are two parts hydrogen in the substance. Then after the hydrogen symbols, we see oxygen (O) without any numbers after it - meaning there is only one part oxygen in the mix.H2O - 2 x Hydrogen and 1 x Oxygen
It would have to be considering that water is a compound of oxygen and hydrogen, and salt is a compound. Sea water is basically salt water.... you will know because when you go to the beach you can smell the salt and if you swallow the water it will burn your throat because of the salt.
"dioxide" you mean? no. there are only 2 gasses in water: hydrogen and oxygen as muchas i know.
Water itself is not on the periodic table of elements because it is a compound, however as you probably know, the chemical equation of water is H2O. That means there are 2 atoms of hydrogen and 1 oxygen atom in each molecule of water. Both hydrogen and oxygen can be both found on the periodic table.
The element "h2o" is water. It was one hydrogen atom and two oxygen atoms. This is completely backwards. The "2" means 2 hydrogens and ONE oxygen. Another term for water is Di-hydrogen-oxide. Di = Two > Hydrogen = Hydrogen [duh] > Oxide = Oxygen
The hydrogen creates a sticky bond with the oxygen molecule to create what we know as a wet texture.