Due to it's one electron in it's outer and only shell. As atoms 'strive' to fill their shells with electrons hydrogen is likely to react with substances in need of an extra electron. Very basic - probably not exhaustive, but most probably holds some minute truth ;)
Hydrogen gas exists as diatomic molecule. Hence, it achieves stability by forming bond.
By being combined with another substance
hydrogen is very unstable
2(6.022*10^23) if we are assuming diatomic hydrogen gas (most stable). 6.022*10^23 if it is elemental hydrogen.
A stable atom of hydrogen (H)
Hydrogen gas is H2. Oxygen gas is O2.
There is no noble gas configuration for hydrogen.
45,0 grams of hydrogen gas have 135,5.10e23 atoms.
Hydrogen is a very reactive chemical element.
Hydrogen is highly flammable and can easily explode. Helium is a more stable gas.
hydrogen gases are stable so they will react no further while hydrogen ions have no electrons so it will react with the ammonia molecule thus becoming g stable
2(6.022*10^23) if we are assuming diatomic hydrogen gas (most stable). 6.022*10^23 if it is elemental hydrogen.
H is the atomic symbol for hydrogen. H2 is the chemical formula for the hydrogen molecule, which is the most common and stable form of hydrogen gas.
Hydrogen-1 and hydrogen-2 isotopes are radioactively stable.
The bond holding the diatomic molecule of hydrogen (which exists in hydrogen gas) is a single covalent bond. This is the sharing of one electron in their 1s orbital, forming an stable electron that of helium: 1s2
Hydrogen-1 and hydrogen-2 isotopes are radioactively stable.
Ever heard of the hydrogen bomb? It is less stable than you might expect. The above answer is not really correct. A hydrogen bomb is not related to hydrogen gas in this sense. You can run a car engine off hydrogen gas fairly easily and safely in a controlled environment. The problem is to find a cheap source of hydrogen.
hydrogen and hydrogen gas are same hydrogen is gas
NO! Hydrogen peroxide is an entirely different compound with the formula H2O2. Unlike water, which is a stable compound, hydrogen peroxide is unstable and gradually decomposes to water and oxygen gas. This decomposition can be accelerated by the addition of a catalyst.
Burning causes hydrogen to convert to water which is extremely stable. Hydrogen is very reactive because it only has one electron and wants to gain one to have a stable two electron configuration like the noble gas helium. Oxygen wants to gain electrons to become like Neon. So Hydrogen burns in oxygen because nature prefers low energy which is the overall result.