CH4 + 2O2 → CO2 + 2H2O
Methane + Oxygen → Carbon dioxide + Water
methane is a relatively potent greenhouse gas.......
The global reaction is:
CH4 + 2 O2 = CO2 + 2 H2O
Alkanes react with oxygen to form carbon dioxide and water.
2C2H6 + 7O2 --> 4CO2 + 6H2O
The chemical equation for methanol burning in oxygen is:2 CH3OH + 3 O2 = 2 CO2 + 4 H2O
Ch4 + 2o2 => 2h2o + co2
CH4+2O2 EQUAL TO CO2+2H2O
Ch4+o2--->co2+2h2o
Dioxide
The general equation for burning/combusting fossil fuels is:- fossil fuel + oxygen(air) = Carbon dioxide and Water.
C + O2 = CO2 That's a combustion (burning) reaction between carbon and oxygen molecules in air.
chemical equation for water- H2O chemical equation for oxygen- O2when water, oxygen and iron comes in contact the process of rusting occurs.
Burning
If you're talking about a chemical equation for a situation where you have an environment containing only methane and propane, there can be no balanced equation because with no oxygen, neither gas will burn.
Methanol + Oxygen => Carbon Dioxide + Water CH4O + O2 => CO2 + H2O
The general equation for burning/combusting fossil fuels is:- fossil fuel + oxygen(air) = Carbon dioxide and Water.
it is a combustion. the word equation would be: sulfur + oxygen → sulfur dioxide the balanced chemical equation: S(s) + O₂(g) → SO₂(g)
C + O2 = CO2 That's a combustion (burning) reaction between carbon and oxygen molecules in air.
Burning sulfur, or burning anything, is a chemical change.
chemical equation for water- H2O chemical equation for oxygen- O2when water, oxygen and iron comes in contact the process of rusting occurs.
Burning is a chemical reaction with oxygen (oxidation).
If you mean Carbon minus Oxygen then, no. It isn't an equation.
Burning
If you're talking about a chemical equation for a situation where you have an environment containing only methane and propane, there can be no balanced equation because with no oxygen, neither gas will burn.
It is a chemical change.
what is the chemical equation of nitrogen + oxygen= nitric oxide