This is a physical change, not a chemical one, but you can write an equation.
CO2(g) --> CO2(l)
However, make sure you write the 2's as subscripts.
If you mean Carbon minus Oxygen then, no. It isn't an equation.
The equation is:2 CO2 ===========> 2 CO + O2
The chemical formula of sulfuric acid is H2SO4.
The combustion of a hydrocarbon yields carbon dioxide and water. CH4 + 2O2 ---> CO2 + 2H2O
The reactants are on the left side of a chemical equation and the products are on the right side of the equation. For example, lets look at the chemical equation for photosynthesis. 6CO2 + 6H2O ---> C6H12O6 + 6O2 The reactants are carbon dioxide(CO2) and water(H2O), and the products are glucose(C6H12O6) and oxygen(O2).
The chemical formula (not: equation) of carbon dioxide is: CO2
The chemical formula (not equation) of sulfur dioxide is SO2.
no
SiO2 for Silicon Dioxide
CO2,g + Cs --> 2COg is the chemical reaction equation.
SO2: sulfur dioxide S + O2 --> SO2
If you mean Carbon minus Oxygen then, no. It isn't an equation.
Fail
carbon dioxide + water ----- glucose + oxygen + energry
The equation is:2 CO2 ===========> 2 CO + O2
The equation is CS2 + 3 O2 -> CO2 + 2 SO2.
The representation is CO2(g).