Combustion reactions
A combustion reaction
Water and carbon dioxide if the combustion is complete.
product
Water can be a product of combustion.
Heat
A combustion reaction is an oxidation reaction - combustion need oxygen; the products are water and carbon dioxide.
heat
Combustion is a sequence of exothermic(heat releasing) chemical reactions between a fuel, most likely a hydrocarbon, and an oxidant, which will always be oxygen. Water, more specifically water vapor, is formed in a combustion reaction because the reactants (initial compounds/elements) chemically change when energy is added to the equation to form the products of water vapor and often carbon dioxide. For example: 2H2 + O2 → 2H2O(g) + heat In the above combustion reaction, hydrogen and oxygen reaction with each other to form water vapor, and in the process release heat. The above reaction is an example of the process used to propel rockets. Or: CH4 + 2O2 → CO2 + 2H2O + heat Again, in this reaction both reacting compounds have the necessary elements to form water vapor as a product. This is the case in every combustion reaction.
Water can be a product of combustion.
the product of any combustion rxn is CO2 (Carbon Dioxide) and H20 (water).
H20 and CO2 along with energy