Water is called a universal coolant because it can cool the machines which has been so hot after the process.the water is pumped into the machine where it comes out as steam which can be used for other purposes.The steam has a lot of energy taken from the machines.
So nice ah............
Hydrogen and oxygen are the reactants and water is the product.
Water would not be able to for hydrogen bonds
Water would not be able to for hydrogen bonds
If replacing water as the coolant in an engine, you would look for a coolant with a higher specific heat. A higher specific heat means the fluid can absorb more heat before its temperature rises, which allows for better thermal management and stability within the engine. This can help prevent overheating and improve overall efficiency during operation.
The criterion "better" is not well defined. A coolant can cool faster, or to a lower temperature, or be more affordable or less toxic than another coolant, or more environmentally friendly. Freon is better than ammonia by some criteria, and worse by others (it is less toxic, but more environmentally harmful). Liquid nitrogen cools things faster and to a lower temperature than ice does, but you might not want to put it in your drink (which would immediately freeze and become undrinkable). Water frozen into ice is a perfect coolant for some purposes, such as keeping my glass of ice tea cold. I would use no other coolant for that purpose.
Hydrogen and oxygen are the reactants and water is the product.
Water would be a compound.
Water would be a compound.
water pump, oil, water, engine coolant....main cause would be engine coolant, just check to see if you have a leak.
Hydrogen is lighter than helium. So hydrogen balloon will float better than helium.
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.
To produce 1 mol of water, 2 mol of hydrogen is needed. Therefore, to produce 7.5 mol of water, you would need 15 mol of hydrogen.
yes, hydrogen is what makes up water and without water there would be no humans beings on the earth
Water is a compound made up of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom bonded together. If there were no hydrogen and oxygen in water, it would not exist as a substance. The properties and characteristics of water, such as its liquid state, transparency, and ability to dissolve other substances, depend on the presence of hydrogen and oxygen.
In pure water, you would find covalent bonds holding the hydrogen and oxygen atoms together within each water molecule. Additionally, there would be hydrogen bonds between neighboring water molecules.
if you put tap water in the bike INSTEAD of coolant, you would run the bike for a few miles, the water would turn into steam, either evaporate or boil over an not cool the bike and you would seize and destroy the engine. If you use it with coolant, like a 50/50 mix, you will probably be fine as long as you are changing your coolant each year. If you are worried about the recommended "distilled" water, do not be too worried. Just be sure that you do not have hard water or anything with softeners or things that could interfere with the cooling system. You also have to worry about the water adding to the corrosive properties of the coolant. Like I said, if you do it, 50/50 with the proper specified coolant, you will be fine as long as you are changing the coolant at the recommended intervals.
Water would not be able to for hydrogen bonds