No. Water and carbon dioxide will form carbonic acid.
H2O + CO2 --> H2CO3
No, burning hydrogen produces only water, it does not produce carbon or carbon dioxide.
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.
Hydrochloric acid, not hydroelectric acid, dissolves in water to produce hydrogen ions (H+) and chloride ions (Cl-). It does not produce carbon dioxide and oxygen.
Carbon dioxide contains carbon and oxygen. Water contains hydrogen and water. Therefore, to combine with oxygen to form CO2 and H2O, butane must contain carbon and hydrogen.
You will need water in the equation as well since there is hydrogen in the glucose molecule that will be made plus oxygen.
Not on its own, and it depends on what is burning. A fire can only produce carbon dioxide if the substance burning with the oxygen contains carbon. And even then, if there are other elements, you will get more substances as products. Carbon will produce carbon dioxide and usually some carbon monoxide as well. Hydrogen will produce water vapor. Sulfur will produce sulfur dioxide. Magnesium will produce magnesium oxide.
No, that's impossible. Water becomes steam when it boils, and that's just water in the gas phase. Water is made of hydrogen and oxygen. There are no carbon atoms there to form carbon dioxide, and carbon dioxide contains no hydrogen.
no i cannot
3h2+co___ch4+h2o
Methane burns in oxygen and gets oxidised. Carbon is oxidised to carbon dioxide, hydrogen to water.
water, hydrogen cyanide,hydrogen sulfide, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, and carbon monoxide
Plants use water, carbon dioxide, and the energy of sunlight to produce glucose and oxygen, in the process called photosynthesis. To form a carbohydrate molecule, carbon and oxygen is combined with hydrogen from the breakup of water molecules.