C represents one atom of Carbon.
O2 represents two atoms of Oxygen, joined together.
One atom of Carbon plus two atoms of oxygen, all joined together, becomes one molecule of carbon dioxide, which has the chemical symbol CO2
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Sorry, but there is no realistic chemical reaction to 'dissociate' CO2 in elements.
C + O2 ------> CO2 is the reaction equation. 1 mole of C + 1 mole of O2 makes 1 mole of CO2.
13.3g C + O2 = CO2 m(C)=4g => n(C)=4/12=0,333mol m(O2)=10.67g => n(O2)=10.67/28=0,381mol we have excess of oxigen n(CO2)=n(C)=0,333 m(CO2)=0.333*40=13.3g
C(s) + O2(g) -> CO2(g)
CH3CH2OH + 3O2 --> 2CO2 + 3H2O Reactants: 6 H; 2 C; 7 O. Products: 6 H; 2 C; 7 O
This is a chemical calculation. 2.5 moles will C reacting with O2.
To balance the equation C + O2 -> CO2, you need to ensure that there are the same number of atoms for each element on both sides of the equation. In this case, you would need to add a coefficient of 2 in front of CO2: C + O2 -> 2CO2. This balances the equation with one carbon atom and two oxygen molecules on each side.
C+O2 →CO2
Carbon plus Oxgen gives Carbon dioxide. C + O2 = CO2
The balanced equation for C + O2 is 2CO. This means that for every 1 carbon molecule reacting with 1 oxygen molecule, 2 carbon monoxide molecules are formed.
This reaction contains the chemical elements carbon (C) and oxygen (O). It involves the combination of carbon and oxygen gas to form carbon dioxide (CO2).
The reactants are Carbon (C) and Oxygen (O). The product is Carbon dioxide (CO2) The equation (balanced) is (C + O2 -----> CO2)
C + O2 ------> CO2 is the reaction equation. 1 mole of C + 1 mole of O2 makes 1 mole of CO2.
13.3g C + O2 = CO2 m(C)=4g => n(C)=4/12=0,333mol m(O2)=10.67g => n(O2)=10.67/28=0,381mol we have excess of oxigen n(CO2)=n(C)=0,333 m(CO2)=0.333*40=13.3g
C(s) + O2(g) -> CO2(g)
The combustion of coal can be represented by the equation: [ C + O_2 → CO_2 ] where carbon (C) from coal combines with oxygen (O2) in the air to produce carbon dioxide (CO2) as the main product of the reaction.
C+co2 = 2co
If you add heat to it, it will separate into C and O2