C2h2+3o2=2c02+2h2o+2c
When a carbonate reacts with an acid, it forms a salt, carbon dioxide gas, and water. The general chemical equation for this reaction is: carbonate + acid → salt + carbon dioxide + water. This reaction is a type of double displacement reaction, where the carbonate ion (CO3 2-) from the carbonate compound reacts with the hydrogen ion (H+) from the acid to form water and carbon dioxide gas, leaving behind a salt.
It is 1 carbon atom to every two oxygen atoms. I'm no maths whizz, but if carbon dioxide is CO2, then that must be it.
no not necessarily.
It can be as cold, or as hot as you wish.
Carbon Dioxide and Carbon Monoxide
The balanced equation for the combustion of acetylene (C2H2) in air to form carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O) is: 2C2H2 + 5O2 -> 4CO2 + 2H2O
First you need to work out the balanced equation. 2C2H2 + 5O2 -----> 4CO2 + 2H2O From this we see that 2 moles of acetylene produces 4 moles of carbon dioxide. 1 mole of carbon dioxide is 12 + 16 + 16 = 44g (adding the mass numbers of the component elements). If 1 mole = 44g then 4 mole = 176g
Carbon dioxide Carbon monoxide Acetylene Azide
The equation is CS2 + 3 O2 -> CO2 + 2 SO2.
The chemical formula (not: equation) of carbon dioxide is: CO2
No, acetylene gas itself does not produce carbon monoxide. When acetylene undergoes combustion, it primarily produces carbon dioxide and water vapor. Carbon monoxide is usually produced when there is incomplete combustion of carbon-containing compounds.
2C2H2(g) + 5O2(g) = 2H2O(g) + 4CO2(g) or, 2 Acetylene molecules + 5 Oxygen molecules = 2 water molecules + 4 Carbon dioxide molecules (+ energy)
The balanced equation for the complete oxidation of acetylene (C2H2) burning in air is: 2C2H2 + 5O2 -> 4CO2 + 2H2O. This equation shows that two molecules of acetylene react with five molecules of oxygen to produce four molecules of carbon dioxide and two molecules of water.
Whatever you want. You can start with whichever element that isn't balanced
CO2 is carbon dioxide. You may have got this from a balanced equation. The 6, called a coefficient, in front of the molecule shows how many of the molecule is needed for it to balance out with the rest of the equation.
It is the balanced equation for the combustion of acetylene (or ethyne).
The reactants are Carbon (C) and Oxygen (O). The product is Carbon dioxide (CO2) The equation (balanced) is (C + O2 -----> CO2)