No, it forms water, dihydrogen oxide. There is no carbon to form carbon dioxide.
When methane is burned in oxygen, assuming complete combustion, the products are carbon dioxide and water.
It partially forms dihydrogen carbonic acid, which is a very weak acid.
Fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and natural gas produce carbon dioxide and water when burned for energy. The combustion process releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, contributing to global warming and climate change.
Carbon dioxide and water I think.
carbon dioxide and water
No, burning hydrogen does not produce carbon dioxide. When hydrogen is burned, it reacts with oxygen to form water vapor, releasing energy in the process. Carbon dioxide is produced when carbon-containing fuels, such as fossil fuels, are burned.
Water and Carbon dioxide?
The products are carbon dioxide and water vapours.
When ethanol burns, it reacts with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide and water as the main products. Other byproducts may include carbon monoxide and traces of other compounds, depending on the combustion conditions.
It can also be called dihydrogen monoxide. It's water! (two hydrogens, and one oxygen)
When methanol is burned, it produces carbon dioxide and water vapor as the main gases.
energy, water, carbon dioxide and sometimes (if incomplete combustion) some carbon monoxides and nitrous oxides (if there are impurities)