You get a mixture of liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen. If this is done at ordinary atmospheric pressures, the oxygen will probably freeze, since its melting point is above the boiling point of liquid hydrogen. (I'm not sure of the solubility of solid oxygen in liquid hydrogen.)
If hydrogen and oxygen mix with LPG (liquefied petroleum gas), there is a risk of explosion when ignited due to the highly flammable nature of hydrogen and oxygen, which are both gases that support combustion. It is important to prevent such mixtures from occurring to avoid potential hazards.
Well 2 atoms of hydrogen and 1 atom of oxygen equals water. Equal parts H and O equals hydrogen peroxide.
No. Simply mixing hydrogen and oxygen will not get you water. You must burn the mixture.
When soap and hydrogen peroxide mix with yeast, the yeast enzymes break down the hydrogen peroxide into oxygen and water. This reaction produces bubbles of oxygen gas, which you may observe as fizzing or foaming. The soap helps to trap the gas bubbles, creating a frothy mixture.
If you could, then you mix hydrogen and oxygen. Water is H2O, which is hydrogen 2 parts oxygen. Have fun!
You take hydrogen and oxygen, and mix them.
If one chemically reacts oxygen gas and hydrogen gas, any liquid produced is water.
BOOM.
When liver and hydrogen peroxide mix, they produce a liquid called hydrogen peroxide. The liver contains an enzyme called catalase, which breaks down hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen gas.
The hydrogen and the carbon dioxide mix. Candle uses oxygen and wax as fuel
If hydrogen and oxygen mix with LPG (liquefied petroleum gas), there is a risk of explosion when ignited due to the highly flammable nature of hydrogen and oxygen, which are both gases that support combustion. It is important to prevent such mixtures from occurring to avoid potential hazards.
mix water with hydrogen duuuuh!
Well 2 atoms of hydrogen and 1 atom of oxygen equals water. Equal parts H and O equals hydrogen peroxide.
Two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen. Mix together to form a liquid and treat areas daily.
No. Simply mixing hydrogen and oxygen will not get you water. You must burn the mixture.
When soap and hydrogen peroxide mix with yeast, the yeast enzymes break down the hydrogen peroxide into oxygen and water. This reaction produces bubbles of oxygen gas, which you may observe as fizzing or foaming. The soap helps to trap the gas bubbles, creating a frothy mixture.
Oxygen, Hydrogen and Helium.