Skip to content

Why does hydrogen peroxide bubble?

Show answer & explanation

Answer: Decomposes releasing oxygen

Boils at room temperatureWrong. Hydrogen peroxide doesn't boil at room temp. Bubbling comes from decomposition into water and oxygen gas when contacting catalysts.

Decomposes releasing oxygenCorrect! Hydrogen peroxide (H₂O₂) is unstable, slowly decomposing: 2H₂O₂ → 2H₂O + O₂. When applied to wounds, enzyme catalase (in blood/cells) rapidly catalyzes this reaction, releasing oxygen gas—bubbles! This also helps clean wounds (lifts debris). Brown bottles slow decomposition (light-sensitive). Pure H₂O₂ is dangerous—store-bought is 3% solution!

Mixes with air moleculesWrong. Bubbles aren't from air mixing. H₂O₂ decomposes chemically (accelerated by enzymes) releasing oxygen gas as product.

🚀 Play today's quiz — new questions daily

More Chemistry Around Us questions