BalancerEquations › 2H2O = 2H2 + O2

2H2O 2H2 + O2

Electrolysis of water — balanced chemical equation, step by step.

Balanced equation
2H2O 2H2 + O2
Decomposition reaction

Splitting water by electrolysis is a leading method for producing clean hydrogen fuel.

How to balance H2O = H2 + O2

A decomposition reaction breaks one compound down into two or more simpler substances. Balancing means choosing coefficients so that every element has the same number of atoms on both sides of the arrow — the Law of Conservation of Mass. Here is how it's done, step by step.

Step 1 — Write the unbalanced equation

Start with the correct formulas for every reactant and product:

H2O = H2 + O2

Step 2 — Count the atoms of each element

With no coefficients yet (everything counted once), the atoms do not match. The ✗ marks show which elements are unbalanced:

ElementReactantsProductsEqual?
H22
O12

Step 3 — Add the smallest whole-number coefficients

Adjust the coefficients in front of each formula until every element balances. The smallest whole-number coefficients are 2 H2O, 2 H2, 1 O2, giving:

2H2O = 2H2 + O2

For a decomposition reaction, balance the element common to the fewest products first, then work outward to the simpler substances.

Step 4 — Verify the balance

Recount every element. Each one now matches on both sides:

ElementReactantsProductsBalanced
H44
O22

All elements are balanced and the coefficients are the smallest whole numbers, so 2H2O = 2H2 + O2 is the correct balanced equation.

Molar masses and mole ratio

The balanced coefficients are also the mole ratio of the reaction. Using standard atomic masses, the molar mass of each substance is:

SubstanceRoleMolar mass (g/mol)Moles
H2Oreactant18.022
H2product2.022
O2product321

For this reaction the mole ratio is 2 : 2 : 1. Combine these molar masses with the ratio in the free stoichiometry calculator to convert between moles, grams, and the number of particles for any reactant or product.

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