the first few bubbles are air but not pure H2
The intermolecular forces are too weak.
Mg + H2SO4 --> MgSO4 + H2 It would appear that this bubbling is hydrogen gas rising to the surface of the solution.
Exhaust fan? If you're concerned about releasing it into the environment, you could bubble it through a sodium bicarbonate solution first.
it depends what metal it is, if it is a reactive metal like potassium or sodium it will effervesce (bubble) and create a metal hydroxide and hydrogen. if it is a less reactive metal it will create a metal oxide and hydrogen (zinc, etc)
No, you can't dissolve oxygen in water, even if it's under the ocean. However, hydrogen and oxygen can be generated by passing an electric current through water and collecting the two gases as they bubble off.
No, a bubble bath is a bubble bath.
hydrogen
Its a chemical reaction with the bacteria.
the proteins in the blood the proteins in the blood
There is a easy way. Just bubble it in water.
it is not gas it is just air
The bubble hydrogen gas through oil in the presence of a catalyst.
The first person who mixed soap, water, and an tool that allowed for an unknown individual to create the first purported soap bubble.
Not much! Some of it, a tiny amount, might bond to the water molecules, but as water already has its standard H2O composition, most extra hydrogen will simply bubble out, hydrogen being lighter than water. For details and discussion of hydrogen bonding with water, see Related Links below these advertisements. The solubility of hydrogen gas in water at 0oC is 0.0019 grams of hydrogen per kilogram of water. At 60oC, the solubility is 0.0012 grams of hydrogen per kilogram of water. That is a tiny amount that will dissolve in the water. The rest would simply bubble out as the previous answerer said. Also, most likely, the water would be already saturated with hydrogen since it was in contact with the atmosphere, which contains hydrogen; so unless you took steps to purge the hydrogen from the water to get water not already saturated with hydrogen, all of the added hydrogen would bubble out since the water would be already saturated with hydrogen.
The reason why it foams or bubble is because blood and cells contain an enzyme called catalase. Since a cut or scrape contains both blood and damaged cells, there is lots of catalase floating around.When the catalase comes in contact with hydrogen peroxide, it turns the hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) into water (H2O) and oxygen gas (O2).H2O2 --> H2O + O2
Mg + H2SO4 --> MgSO4 + H2 It would appear that this bubbling is hydrogen gas rising to the surface of the solution.
When hydrogen peroxide bubbles when its pored on an open wound, is because it is cleaning out all of the germs and infection.
Exhaust fan? If you're concerned about releasing it into the environment, you could bubble it through a sodium bicarbonate solution first.