You breath in O^2 and breath out CO^2.
No. it's covalent. carbon forms a double bond (shares two electrons) with each O atom. giving O=C=O (CO2).
No. it's covalent. carbon forms a double bond (shares two electrons) with each O atom. giving O=C=O (CO2).
James O. Welch Co. was created in 1925.
Yes, CO is a binary compound. It is formed by two different elements. C is Carbon and O is Oxygen. CO is Carbon monoxide.
The equilibrium constant for the reaction C + O2 -> CO is Kc = [CO]/([C][O2]), where the square brackets denote molar concentrations.
The chemical symbol for carbon monoxide is CO.
Par-a-strat-e-o-sphe-co-myia strat-e-o-sphe-co-my-poses
The chemical formula (CO) tells you - one atom of Carbon (C) and one atom of Oxygen (O) = 2 atoms.
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What is 'hcooh'??? If you mean 'HCOOH'. then there are no delocalised electrons. HCOOH ; H-C(=O)-O-H , which is methanoic acid. NB When writing chemical formula/symbols, remember single letter elemental symbols are ALWAYS a CAPITAL letter ; Hence Hydrogen(H) not 'h', Carbon(C) , not 'c' and Oxygen(O) . not 'o'. Two letter symbols are written ; first letter is a CAPITAL letter and the second letter is small/lower case. e.g. Chlorine (Cl). This is as shown in the Periodic Table and is the interntional I.U.P.A.C. standard. This is to avoid confusion with say 'CO' 'co' Co'. 'cO'. CO ; Carbon Monoxide co ; does not exist Co ; Cobalt cO ; Irrelevant.
X-OH + HOOC-Y = X-O-CO-Y + H2O alcohol + acid = ester + water so -O-CO- is an ester
C, H, O, N, S, Ca, P, Fe, Ni, Co, Na, K, Cl, F, I, Se, etc.