If you think to 4 moles of methane the number is 24,088563428.10e+23.
0.673 moles methane ( 6.022 X 10^23/1 mole CH4) = 4.05 X 10^23 molecules of methane
6 molecules of oxygen are needed to react with 3 methane molecules as one molecule of oxygen ( O2) are needed for methane gas.
There are many, but the most common is methane (CH4).
That depends on the fuel. Natural gas, methane, needs 2 molecules of oxygen, but gasoline, octane, needs 17 molecules of oxygen.
methane , propene
How many molecules are in 30 liters of methane (CH4) at STP
It represent a one molecule.CH4 stands for Methane
0.673 moles methane ( 6.022 X 10^23/1 mole CH4) = 4.05 X 10^23 molecules of methane
8
8
16
methane + oxygen -> carbon dioxide + water 2 Methane molecules plus 4 Oxygen molecules gives 2 molecules of Carbon dioxide plus 4 Water molecules.
No, many do not. For example methane CH4.
Actually methane molecules have no oxygen atoms. Methane is an organic compound ( a gas at room temperature) which is composed of only carbon and hydrogen atoms. Each methane molecule has 1 carbon atom bonded to 4 hydrogen atoms by covalent bonds.
6 molecules of oxygen are needed to react with 3 methane molecules as one molecule of oxygen ( O2) are needed for methane gas.
There are many, but the most common is methane (CH4).
Well methane has a chemical structure of CH4 (one carbon surrounded by 4 hydrogen atoms), so for 2 methane you would need a total of 2 carbon atoms and 8 hydrogen atoms (or 4 H2 molecules)