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true Not very much, approx. 0,000055 %. Hydrogen and helium are the two elements you're LEAST likely to find in air - helium because it just floats off into outer space, and hydrogen because it reacts with other elements so readily.

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8y ago
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13y ago

Hydrogen doesn't exist in the air that we breathe. You can extract it from water though.

With baking soda, water, a nail, and an electrical current, you can separate water in to hydrogen and oxygen.

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14y ago

Air does not normally contain free hydrogen (H2). The only component of air that contains any hydrogen is water vapor, and it is easier to get H2 out of water in its liquid form using electolysis.

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12y ago

At room temperature nothing; with the influence of a high temperature and for some concentrations a disastrous explosion can occur.

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8y ago

Yes, but in such a very small amount that it is barely worth mentioning. Most of air is comprised of oxygen and nitrogen.

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15y ago

Highly Explosive!

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Q: What happens when air mix in hydrogen?
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