Want this question answered?
Hydrogen is a colourless gas at ordinary temperatures and pressures. It's also an element that combines with many other elements, for example, oxygen, to form water. The element sodium, a metal, can combine with hydrogen and oxygen to form sodium hydroxide. But other metals (and other things) form hydroxides too. Sodium hydroxide is NaOH where Na is sodium, O is oxygen and H is hydrogen. It's the OH part that's the hydroxide. In NH4OH, ammonium hydroxide, which is often used in dilute form for cleaning windows, that OH also stands for hydroxide. The OH is something that sticks together in many ways.
It isn't. Hydrogen is often placed in its own series of elements, since nothing is quite like it; even lithium, the next member in its period, is still vastly different in many ways.
The properties of a compound differ from the properties of its component elements. For example, at room temperature, hydrogen and oxygen are odorless, colorless gases. Hydrogen gas is highly flammable, and oxygen gas supports combustion. They combine chemically to form water molecules. At room temperature, water is a liquid, and is not flammable and does not support combustion.
Two ways that Hydrogen is used is by,using it as a compound to make gas for cars,and by using it as a compound to make water.H2O.
One of the ways to separate the two elements in water is electrolysis. It this case it is no longer water so you aren't literally removing the oxygen you are destroying the water by changing it into oxygen and hydrogen.
Hydrogen is a colourless gas at ordinary temperatures and pressures. It's also an element that combines with many other elements, for example, oxygen, to form water. The element sodium, a metal, can combine with hydrogen and oxygen to form sodium hydroxide. But other metals (and other things) form hydroxides too. Sodium hydroxide is NaOH where Na is sodium, O is oxygen and H is hydrogen. It's the OH part that's the hydroxide. In NH4OH, ammonium hydroxide, which is often used in dilute form for cleaning windows, that OH also stands for hydroxide. The OH is something that sticks together in many ways.
Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, and Nitrogen are the four base elements of life.
Because the elements can combine in many ways to form compounds, and compounds can be mixed in many differed ways. Moreover, some elements occur in different forms. The elements carbon and hydrogen alone combine for form thousands of compounds.
Nitrogen, oxygen, carbon and hydrogen are elements that combine to form molecules in a vast number of ways. There is no single molecular formula for them. The symbols for these elements are: nitrogen: N oxygen: O carbon: C hydrogen: H
One of the ways the Periodic Table is organized is by rows. After Hydrogen, the next four elements is: Lithium, Sodium, Potassium and Rubidium. These are also in the same Group as Hydrogen therefor they are the closest to having similar properties to Hydrogen. I'm studying the Periodic Table in class. (Eighth grade Science.)
You pee
Carbon can bond with itself, and many other elements.
Ionic Covalent Hydrogen? Metallic thats the main 4
I am guessing that you are talking about the two elements hydrogen and helium. If you want to draw a orbital model, first draw the nucleus. For hydrogen, make sure that there is one proton and however many neutrons you need. For helium, there must be two protons and at least two neutrons. Then, for hydrogen, you draw one electron in the first shell. For helium, you draw two. There are many other ways to symbolize the different elements, such as the electron cloud model, but that's extremely hard to draw.
It isn't. Hydrogen is often placed in its own series of elements, since nothing is quite like it; even lithium, the next member in its period, is still vastly different in many ways.
Carbon, hydrogen and oxygencarbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. it is called glucose, fructose, saccharose, lactose, ....
Carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. There are so many different ways that they are arranged, it would not be feasible to describe everyone here. will you go out with me