Hydrogen sulphide smells like rotting eggs.
Hydrogen gas itself is odorless. However, commercial hydrogen can sometimes contain impurities that may give it a slightly metallic or ammonia-like smell.
No, Hydrogen does not smell as it is an odorless, tasteles elemental gas.
H2S is hydrogen sulphide. NOT the suffix ' ---ide'. It has the 'rotten eggs' smell. When opening a rotten egg, it is this gas that you smell.
Because the smell is added so it can be detected. If natural gas smells like rotten eggs then it contains H2S or hydrogen sulfide. Actually the smell associated with rotten eggs is hydrogen sulfide, so hydrogen sulfide does not smell like rotten eggs, rotten eggs smell like hydrogen sulfide.
Because the smell is added so it can be detected. If natural gas smells like rotten eggs then it contains H2S or hydrogen sulfide. Actually the smell associated with rotten eggs is hydrogen sulfide, so hydrogen sulfide does not smell like rotten eggs, rotten eggs smell like hydrogen sulfide.
Hydrogen gas has no taste, colour or smell.
hydrogen is odorless
What you smell that is so awful is hydrogen sulfide.
No. both are odourless gases.
The smell is from hydrogen sulfide - H2S.
No, oil cannot turn into an ammonia smell. Ammonia is a compound formed by nitrogen and hydrogen, while oil is composed of carbon and hydrogen. The presence of ammonia smell could indicate a separate source of ammonia contamination.
Cyanide smells of almonds.