No, oxygen is required for combustion to take place.
combustion is supported by oxygen because combustion is a oxidation process but oxygen is not combustible
Yes
16%
yes
Oxygen? no, nitrogen is an odourless and colourless diatomic gas which can be used to support combustion.
Oxygen (O2) is required for combustion.
No. Oxygen is a reactant in combustion, not a product.
More oxygen is used in a complete combustion.
the three essentials for combustion are :- (i) combustible substance (ii) oxygen (iii) ignition temperature
No. Oxygen is required for combustion. Mercury is not involved.
oxygen
Oxygen is a required reactant in a combustion reaction - without oxygen, you do not have combustion. If you combine a hydrocarbon with oxygen and add heat, you will cause a combustion reaction that results in carbon dioxide and water being formed (provided there was complete combustion).
Oxygen is the required gas that is necessary for combustion
Hydrogen
There is no oxygen on the moon required for combustion
Oxygen? no, nitrogen is an odourless and colourless diatomic gas which can be used to support combustion.
Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen For example the combustion of hydrocarbon, C2H4 + 3O2 --> 2CO2 + 2H2O
Oxygen (O2) is required for combustion.
Combustion requires a fuel and oxygen, so oxygen is definitely one of your required elements. Combustible fuels usually contain carbon and hydrogen and maybe oxygen too, so all those three.
Rusting is similar to combustion in that oxygen is a required reactant. However, classic combustion has carbon dioxide and water as products, whereas rusting simply has a metal oxide as a product.
No. Oxygen is a reactant in combustion, not a product.