Na+H2o+H2=2 Nhoh
H2 molecule is the least polar. Between H2O and H2S, the most polar will be H2O as oxygen is more electronegative than sulphur.
yes it will make H2O
H2 and O2.
Hydrogen gas (H2) burns to form water (H2O). The reaction equation is as follows: 2 H2 + O2 --> 2 H2O
Strongest---------------> Weakest HI, HCl, H2S, H2O According to MasteringChemistry.com
Little Johnny is no more, What he thought was H2O Was H2 SO4.
No. KH (potassium hydride) is a base. It will react with water in this manner: KH + H2O --> KOH + H2
It forms sulfuric acid, a major cause of acid rain2(H2O) + SO2 = H2SO4 +H2
Na+H2o+H2=2 Nhoh
The strongest acids would have a pH of 1 where it would completely dissociate in aqueous solution. There is a list of common strong acids if you look it up. HI being the strongest acid.
The balanced reaction for the reaction of uranium fluoride, water and hydrogen gas is UF6 + 2 H2O + H2 = UO2 + 6 HF. The final products are uranium oxide and fluoric acid.
Example [OH-]acid (!) conjugated with [O2-]baseor else, in water: [H2O]acid (!) conjugated with [OH-]base
No. Hydrogen gas is H2. H2O is water.
k+h2o>koh+h2
It reacts VERY strongly with the protons [ H+ions] of acid, even neural water contains enough of them. Hydrogen gas is formed which explodes with oxygen in the air. In water: 2 Na + H2O ==> 2 Na+ + H2 + 2 OH- + heat or in acid 2 Na + 2 H+ ==> 2 Na+ + H2 + heat both followed by the gas explosion reaction: 2 H2 + O2 ==> 2 H2O + heat
Because HCl, HBr, and HI ionize completely when dissolved in water..HCl + H2O → H3O+ + Cl-HBr + H2O → H3O+ + Br-HI + H2O → H3O+ + I-(nitric acid, sulfuric acid, and perchloric acid are also strong acids)..where as weak acids only ionize partially..acetic acid as an example..C2H3O2H + H2O ⇌ H3O+ + C2H3O2-