acids
Dehydrogenation is the name of the reaction that removes hydrogen from an organic compound. This process typically involves the removal of hydrogen atoms from adjacent carbon atoms, resulting in the formation of a double bond.
A bond can't remove atoms. What you would want if you have hydrogen atoms, also known as protons (H+) floating around in your solution (which for the record is impossible, they'd be apart of a compound like HCl or H2O) you would need to add a base which will attract the molecules. I think the answer you are looking for is hydrogen bond which is a type of sigma bond but it is between hydrogen and an electronegative atom.
metals and salts that precipitate it - e.g silver nitrate would remove OH ions from solution. Acids would also tend to remove OH ions from solution
Substances that remove H+ ions from a solution are called bases or alkalis. Bases react with H+ ions to form water, reducing the concentration of H+ ions in the solution. Examples of bases include sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and ammonia (NH3).
To answer this question we would need to know the substance from which the hydrogen is to be removed.
See this link.
false
A base is any solute that removes hydrogen ions (H+) from solution (raising the pH), or it can be called a proton acceptor. Excess hydroxide ions (OH-) in body fluids cause alkalosis.
Hydrogen
The reaction that removes hydrogen ions from the blood is called the bicarbonate buffering system. In this system, carbonic acid (H2CO3) can bind with hydrogen ions to form bicarbonate ions (HCO3-) and water, effectively removing excess hydrogen ions from the blood.
an acid dissolved in water produce H+, a base dissolved in water removes H+ Question wording is unclear what process is meant.
A solution of water and bleach is effective at removing mold from surfaces.