To burn blue flames at least twice as much O2 is needed to burn one measured volume of natural gas CH4.CH4 + 2 O2 --> CO2 + 2 H2O
H2o+no2
if you burn natural gas in a boiler it is useful or harmful
This is the a change of phase from liquid to gas.
h2o
When Methane combusts (IE add oxygen, burn it), you get CO2 and H2O.
H2O is water, it can be a liquid, a gas or a solid (ice).
No. Hydrogen gas is H2. H2O is water.
Co2+h2o
H2o
So2 + h20
To burn blue flames at least twice as much O2 is needed to burn one measured volume of natural gas CH4.CH4 + 2 O2 --> CO2 + 2 H2O
It is not conserved, as you burn the piece of paper the energy is released.
If you mean a residential gas fireplace, it would burn natural gas, which is mostly methane (CH4).
The products of any combustion reaction should simply be carbon dioxide (CO2) gas and liquid water (H2O). This applies to the combustion of glycerol.
Carbon Dioxide gas is not flammable at all, it will not burn at all! The gas which does burn with a pop sound is hydrogen gas.
it turns into a gas