Binary
No, hydrogen peroxide and alcohol are two very different substances.
Yes, for binary acids (acids composed of hydrogen and a non-metal), the hydrogen part of the compound is named using the prefix "hydro." This is common in binary acids such as hydrochloric acid (HCl) and hydrofluoric acid (HF).
There are many compounds with oxygen and hydrogen. The most trivial is water, H2O. Also, every acid contains hydrogen, and if they contains oxygen too, they are oxo-acids. Examples: Hydrogen-peroxide: H2O2 Halogenide oxo-acids: HOF HOCl HOBr HOI Sulphuric acid, H2SO4, and sulphite acid, H2SO3. Nitric acid, HNO3, and nitrous acid, HNO2. Phosphoric acids: H4P2O7, H3PO3, H3PO4. Also, there is a lot of organic oxo acids. Every alcohol contains oxygen and hydrogen, every phenol, aether, carbohydrate contains them too.
There are several acids that have hydrogen combined with only 1 other element. Some examples (but not all) are HCl (hydrochloric acid), HI (hydroiodic acid), any other halogen combined with hydrogen.
H2O2 is the formula for hydrogen peroxide.
Hydrogen peroxide is a weak acid.
Hydrogen peroxide is a weak acid.
Hydrogen peroxide is classified as neither an acid nor a base, but rather as a peroxide.
Sulfuric acid can be made using hydrogen peroxide by reacting hydrogen peroxide with sulfur dioxide gas in the presence of a catalyst. This reaction produces sulfuric acid as a product.
The reaction between sulfuric acid and hydrogen peroxide produces oxygen gas and water.
The reaction between sulfuric acid and hydrogen peroxide produces oxygen gas and water.
No, ammonia is not a binary acid. Binary acids are compounds composed of hydrogen and one other element, usually a nonmetal. Ammonia is a compound made up of nitrogen and hydrogen, so it is not a binary acid.
Hydrogen peroxide is slightly acidic.
HI is a binary molecular compound formed between the elements hydrogen and iodine. It is not an acid because it does not contain hydrogen bonded to an oxygen atom. Instead, it is named as hydrogen iodide.
HClO3 - this formula represents chloric acid, which is not a binary acid. Binary acids are composed of hydrogen and a nonmetal element, while chloric acid contains hydrogen, chlorine, and oxygen.
No, hydrogen peroxide and alcohol are two very different substances.
HClO3 is not an example of a binary acid. Binary acids consist of hydrogen and one other element (usually a nonmetal). HCl (hydrochloric acid) and H2S (hydrogen sulfide) are examples of binary acids.