Yes.
I tried it with isopropanol. No gas evolved, but there formed on the bottom a clear thick condensate (which I have yet to identify). The liquid remained clear as well.
Carbon dioxide may be a product of the ethanol fermentation.
Carbon and argon do not react.
i think carbon reacts with acids
They don't react.
Isopropyl alcohol has the chemical formula of C3H7OH. When it reacts with oxygen, the reaction is isopropyl alcohol plus oxygen equals carbon dioxide plus water (2 C3H7OH + 9 O2 = 6 CO2 + 8 H2O).
Carbon dioxide may be a product of the ethanol fermentation.
No Chroloflourocarbons can not react with carbon dioxide
Carbon react with iron forming carbides in steel.
no
Yes - The enzymes in yeast react with sugar during the brewing process, to produce alcohol. The by-product of the reaction is carbon dioxide.
Carbon and argon do not react.
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Oxygen
They don't react.
i think carbon reacts with acids
Isopropyl alcohol has the chemical formula of C3H7OH. When it reacts with oxygen, the reaction is isopropyl alcohol plus oxygen equals carbon dioxide plus water (2 C3H7OH + 9 O2 = 6 CO2 + 8 H2O).
The alcohol in drinks like Beer and Wine is a compound of carbon. It is called ethyl alcohol - C2H5OH