Liquid oxygen is typically cheaper than liquid hydrogen because oxygen is more readily available and easier to produce. Liquid hydrogen, on the other hand, requires more energy-intensive processes for production and storage, making it more expensive.
No. Hydrogen and oxygen will only react at high temperatures.
In water, two hydrogen are covalently bonded to one oxygen making it a compound not a mixture.
Liquid oxygen is a compound, specifically a molecule composed of two oxygen atoms bonded together (O2).
It is not a mixture but a compound of hydrogen and oxygen. We call this compound water.
When liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen are mixed together in the correct stoichiometric ratio and ignited, they react exothermically to form water vapor. This reaction releases a large amount of energy, producing intense heat and a loud explosion. The reaction between liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen is commonly used as a rocket fuel due to its high energy output.
Rockets are propelled into space using liquid or solid propellants. Liquid propellants typically consist of liquid oxygen or hydrogen as the oxidizer and a fuel such as liquid hydrogen or kerosene. Solid propellants are a mixture of fuel and oxidizer that are combined into a solid form.
A mixture of hydrogen and oxygen would be a highly flammable gaseous mixture. If ignited, the mixture would burn, explode, and form water vapor. Water is not a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen but a compound.
Liquid oxygen is typically cheaper than liquid hydrogen because oxygen is more readily available and easier to produce. Liquid hydrogen, on the other hand, requires more energy-intensive processes for production and storage, making it more expensive.
No. Water is a compound of hydrogen and oxygen, not a mixture.
Hydrogen Peroxide (H2O2) is a compound, and liquid at room temperature. It is NOT a mixture. However, at room temeprature it slowly decomposes to oxygen and water. 2H2O2 = 2H2O + O2 It the oxygen remains in solution in water then it is heterogeneous solution, NOT Mixture.
The formation of liquid water from hydrogen and oxygen gases is a chemical reaction that results in a compound. Water is a chemical compound with a fixed ratio of hydrogen to oxygen atoms (H2O) and distinct properties different from its constituent elements.
No. Hydrogen and oxygen will only react at high temperatures.
In water, two hydrogen are covalently bonded to one oxygen making it a compound not a mixture.
A mixture of hydrogen and oxygen typically consists of hydrogen gas (H2) and oxygen gas (O2) molecules. The ratio of hydrogen to oxygen is usually 2:1, as per the chemical formula for water (H2O). This mixture is highly explosive and should be handled with caution.
No, H2O is the chemical formula for water, which is a compound made up of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. It exists as a liquid, solid (ice), or gas (water vapor) depending on its temperature and pressure.
The fuel used by the Apollo 15 spacecraft as well as all the Apollo spacecrafts , was a mixture of oxygen and nitrogen gases.