No, Hydrogen peroxide is a compound the chemical formula H2O2. Hydrogen and element and is shown as either H or H2. Hydrogen is a gas at room temperature while hydrogen peroxide is a liquid, and is used in hospitals.
The pH of hydrogen peroxide is typically around 4-5, making it acidic. However, the pH may vary depending on the concentration of the hydrogen peroxide solution.
Yes, it contains the ordinary peroxide ion attached to two hydrogen ions.
No. Hydrogen peroxide is usually dissolved in water to make it more stable. The peroxide you buy at the pharmacy is 3% hydrogen peroxide and 97% water. Pure hydrogen peroxide, which is a dangerously strong oxidizer, can explosively decompose into water and oxygen.
Pure hydrogen peroxide has a density of 1.450g/cm3 at 20 oC. (Wikipedia)
No, bleach and hydrogen peroxide are not the same. Bleach is a chemical compound containing sodium hypochlorite, while hydrogen peroxide is a different compound composed of hydrogen and oxygen. Both are commonly used as disinfectants, but they have different chemical compositions and properties.
Hydrogen Peroxide is not a fuel. It is an oxidising agent. Chemical formula H2O2.
The pH of hydrogen peroxide is typically around 4-5, making it acidic. However, the pH may vary depending on the concentration of the hydrogen peroxide solution.
H2O2 is a covalent compound, as a pure sample of it cannot be split into other separate compounds by physical means. However, the bottle labeled "Hydrogen Peroxide" in your medicine cabinet is actually a mixture (it's about a 3% solution of hydrogen peroxide the compound in water).
Yes, pure hydrogen peroxide can cause burns when it comes into contact with the skin.
Yes, hydrogen peroxide and "agua oxigenada" are the same chemical compound, H2O2. "Agua oxigenada" is the Spanish term for hydrogen peroxide.
Yes, it contains the ordinary peroxide ion attached to two hydrogen ions.
Far from it. Water contains one oxygen atom with two hydrogen atoms bonded to it. Hydrogen peroxide has two oxygen atoms each with its own hydrogen atom.Right now you're like, "well, so what?" The two oxygen atoms are connected with a single bond - the "peroxide group." Peroxides are very unstable and energetic. Pure hydrogen peroxide can be used as rocket fuel.
No, hydrogen peroxide refers to the chemical compound H2O2, which is a colorless liquid. Hydrogen peroxide solution is a diluted form of hydrogen peroxide mixed with water, commonly found in concentrations of 3% or 0.5%.
Mixture, because it is mixed with all sorts of chemicals, such as smog, and or pollen.Mixture is NOT a pure substance, because to be a pure substance, it can't be mixed with anything.
It is not a mixture at all. H2O2 is a (pure) compound
No. Hydrogen peroxide is usually dissolved in water to make it more stable. The peroxide you buy at the pharmacy is 3% hydrogen peroxide and 97% water. Pure hydrogen peroxide, which is a dangerously strong oxidizer, can explosively decompose into water and oxygen.
The formula is H2O2 so in pure hydrogen peroxide it would be 50 mole %. As the molecular weight is 34 it would be 2/34 x 100 = 5.9 weight % (1 decimal place).