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The apparatus that I am using is a glass container, with two electrodes,two glass cylinders, water, and a battery. In the glass container will be filled with water and two electrodes kept inside the glass cylinder and then dipped in water.

The two electrodes are then connected with the positive and negative terminals of the battery and the container is sealed. As the current is started the water will be separated into hydrogen and oxygen. After extraction of the gas, the two gases are passed separately.

In this process, will the hydrogen gas start burning immediately as soon as produced? If yes, then what to do to make it pass without burning? The separated gas is passed through glass pipes, will the extraction work properly?

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    $\begingroup$ Please take any necessary precautions for handling the hydrogen. If you have any hesitation about what the correct techniques are, please consult someone with the proper experience. $\endgroup$
    – jonsca
    Commented Nov 16, 2012 at 23:45

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No, it won’t burn immediately. As your electrodes are generally separated by some distance, you should be able to isolate the produced oxygen and hydrogen gas by catching the respective bubble streams under a submerged test tube or the like. Alone, neither oxygen nor hydrogen will burn, however combining the oxygen and hydrogen gas will produce an explosive mixture. Mixing the hydrogen with air will also produce an explosive mixture as the atmosphere is about 22 % oxygen.

To get the hydrogen to burn, you need to supply the necessary activation energy, which can be supplied by a spark or flame. After this, the reaction will be self-sustaining due to its exothermicity. There are in fact entirely self-contained apparatus which can be purchased from scientific teaching shops that can electrolytically split water and then combust the hydrogen and oxygen using a piezoelectric ignition system, the ensuing tiny explosion causing water to spurt out of a small hole. Wikipedia mentions that the autoignition temperature of hydrogen in air is 500 degrees Celsius.

On a small scale, this reaction is quite safe, however you should always take safety precautions such as wearing protective eyewear and having fire-suppression equipment at hand.

Here’s an illustration of a reasonable water-splitting setup. Remember that your water should contain an electrolyte such as dissolved salt. Keep in mind that if your potential difference is high enough you will start to produce small quantities of chlorine gas and aqueous sodium hydroxide, both of which are hazardous in high concentrations.

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I should draw attention to the fact that the $\ce{H2}$ headspace is about twice the volume of the $\ce{O2}$ headspace. This comes down to the stoichiometry of the reaction, and also means that the $\ce{H2}$ volume will increase at twice the rate of $\ce{O2}$. The wires I’ve illustrated connect to the terminals of a battery or lab PSU.

Addendum: Here’s a nice guide on how to construct and safely operate a water-splitting/combusting apparatus using household equipment, aimed at secondary school students.

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  • $\begingroup$ Thanks for addressing the safety concerns further, I have never done this in a lab. $\endgroup$
    – jonsca
    Commented Nov 17, 2012 at 8:09
  • $\begingroup$ @jonsca - I've got the reaction going in a glass of salty water right now - 12 volt regulated power supply, two bits of wire and two mechanical pencil leads (graphite + clay) for electrodes. The electrodes rapidly disintegrate. $\endgroup$ Commented Nov 17, 2012 at 8:47

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