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Yes, it contains the ordinary peroxide ion attached to two hydrogen ions.
No reaction occurs between the acidified hydrogen peroxide and the other halide ions, because the hydrogen ions involved in both cases are in the same group. For a reaction to occur it needed to have an element that is more reactive than hydrogen.
Of course it's water (H2O) or hydrogen peroxide (H2O2).
This reaction decomposes Hydrogen peroxide into Water and Oxygen: Here is the stepwise process:1> Hydrogen peroxide oxidizes the Potassium iodide into another salt called Potassium Hypoiodite, and itself gets reduced to water.H2O2 + KI----> KIO + H2O2>This salt is quite unstable and rapidly reacts with Hydrogen peroxide. Here the Peroxide ions disproportionates into Oxide ions and Molecular Oxygen gas.H2O2 + KIO ----> KI + H2O + O2So the overall reaction an be written as:H2O2 --KI--> H2O + O2
Because it's an ionic compound and all ionic compounds disassociate in water solvents. They break apart into separate ions and form an electrolytic solution. In this case it would be the H+ cation and the (O2)2- anion from hydrogen peroxide which is H2O2
to prevent the build up of hydrogen peroxideFunctions of catalaseis a common enzyme found in nearly all living organisms that are exposed to oxygen where it functions to catalyze the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide to water and oxygen.
Yes, it contains the ordinary peroxide ion attached to two hydrogen ions.
Hudrogen peroxide can. It contains Ions in the solution.
it doesnt
No reaction occurs between the acidified hydrogen peroxide and the other halide ions, because the hydrogen ions involved in both cases are in the same group. For a reaction to occur it needed to have an element that is more reactive than hydrogen.
Kirk L. Shanahan has written: 'The effect of Fe+, Cr+, Ni, and Mn+ ions on decomposition of hydrogen peroxide solution' -- subject(s): Ions, Decomposition (Chemistry), Hydrogen peroxide
Of course it's water (H2O) or hydrogen peroxide (H2O2).
The chemical formula of hydrogen peroxide is H2O2.
This reaction decomposes Hydrogen peroxide into Water and Oxygen: Here is the stepwise process:1> Hydrogen peroxide oxidizes the Potassium iodide into another salt called Potassium Hypoiodite, and itself gets reduced to water.H2O2 + KI----> KIO + H2O2>This salt is quite unstable and rapidly reacts with Hydrogen peroxide. Here the Peroxide ions disproportionates into Oxide ions and Molecular Oxygen gas.H2O2 + KIO ----> KI + H2O + O2So the overall reaction an be written as:H2O2 --KI--> H2O + O2
anerobic
Hydrogen peroxide is H2O2, so each molecule is composed of two hydrogens and two oxygens. It is somewhat unstable, and left to its own devices will dissociate into water (or H2O) and hydrogen ions (H+); as such, it won't be an effective cleaning agent any longer.
Because it's an ionic compound and all ionic compounds disassociate in water solvents. They break apart into separate ions and form an electrolytic solution. In this case it would be the H+ cation and the (O2)2- anion from hydrogen peroxide which is H2O2