No. Not even close. Hydroelectric refers to creating electricity using water power. Hydrogen is a flamable gas.
Yes, hydrogen peroxide and "agua oxigenada" are the same chemical compound, H2O2. "Agua oxigenada" is the Spanish term for hydrogen peroxide.
Protium and Deuterium are the same element. They are just the name of a certain isotope of Hydrogen. Protium is the most common form of hydrogen. It has 1 proton and 1 electron. Deuterium has 1 proton 1 neutron and 1 electron.
Hydrogen is not malleable in the same way that metals are. It is a gas at room temperature and does not exhibit the same physical properties as solid materials like metals.
No, they are not the same.Hydrogen sulfide (H2S, gaseous) is a kind of poison, smelling like rotten eggs, andHydrogen (H2, the lightest gas we know) is a odourless, very explosive gas when in contact with air.
No, oxygen and hydrogen are not the same compound. They are two different elements on the periodic table. When they combine chemically, they form a new compound called water, which is made of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom (H2O).
Hydroelectric, hydroelectricity, hydrogen, etc...
Yes, the same.
no. yet they are similar
Whether the electricity is generated by conventional power stations, or hydroelectric power generation, the electricity used in homes and businesses will still be the same, and used the same.
Hydrochloric acid, not hydroelectric acid, dissolves in water to produce hydrogen ions (H+) and chloride ions (Cl-). It does not produce carbon dioxide and oxygen.
hydroelectric means drawing energy from the natural flow of water. Basically harvesting gravitational energy. hydro just means the same as water.
All hydrogen atoms are the same but they are different from the atoms of other elements.
No. Hydrogen and oxygen are elements, not compounds. They are not the same.
The same thing as in a fossil fueled or hydroelectric power plant.
The same way you spelled it, hydrogen.
hydroelectric energy is energy that comes from water
Metallic hydrogen is a physical state that hydrogen enters under extreme pressure.