Hydrogen is neither a chemical or physical property...it is a chemical element.
The observation that hydrogen chloride is a gas at room temperature is a PHYSICAL property.
it is a physical property(electricity).
I think you mean oxygen. However, hydrogen itself might ignite if heated enough by the splint. The chemical property is, anyway, either carbon or hydrogen's affinity with oxygen.
This is a chemical reaction.
Hydrogen is neither a chemical or physical property...it is a chemical element.
Hydrogen is a chemical property because it is a pure substance and it cannot be broken down into simpler substances by physical means. It is the simplest and most abundant chemical element in the universe.
It is a Chemical property.
The reaction of sodium metal with water to produce hydrogen gas is a chemical property. This is because a new substance (hydrogen gas) is formed as a result of a chemical reaction between sodium and water.
The observation that hydrogen chloride is a gas at room temperature is a PHYSICAL property.
Yes. oxidation is chemical property. It includes addition of oxygen or removal of hydrogen
Burning hydrogen is a chemical change rather than a chemical property. A chemical change involves the formation of new substances with different chemical compositions, as in the reaction between hydrogen and oxygen to form water. A chemical property, on the other hand, describes how a substance can undergo a chemical change.
One chemical property of hydrogen is its ability to react with oxygen to form water. Hydrogen also exhibits the property of being highly flammable when exposed to air or an oxygen-containing atmosphere.
Yes, the fact that hydrogen can explode when ignited in air is a chemical property. It is a characteristic of hydrogen's reactivity with oxygen that results in a combustion reaction, producing energy in the form of heat and light.
it is a physical property(electricity).
I think you mean oxygen. However, hydrogen itself might ignite if heated enough by the splint. The chemical property is, anyway, either carbon or hydrogen's affinity with oxygen.
1.Action with litmus