Absolutely none, as there is no oxygen in hydrogen cyanide. Its formula is HCN--one atom each of hydrogen, carbon and nitrogen.
The list of answers were not provided. Hydrogen cyanide is the only one on that list that is not commonly produced by double replacement reactions and away.
Sodium cyanide is not made directly from sodium chloride. It is typically produced through the reaction of sodium hydroxide and hydrogen cyanide gas. These raw materials are not directly related to sodium chloride, which is table salt.
The reaction is:C2H4O + HCN = C3H5NO
Hydrogen cyanide is commonly known as prussic acid.
Since the formula for glucose is C6H12O6 and hydrogen cyanide HCN simply crack the sugar molecule in a fashion that leaves only one hydrogen attached to each carbon and insert a nitrogen into the molecule to take up the open bonding sites. Alternately hydrogenate the sugar to form methane. Then react the methane with ammonia and air over a platinum/rhodium catalyst. This is of course the Andrussow process.
hydrogen cyanide
Hydrogen cyanide can be produced naturally in some plants like cassava, and it can also be formed through industrial processes such as the combustion of nitrogen-containing substances like plastics, synthetic textiles, and fossil fuels. Additionally, hydrogen cyanide is present in cigarette smoke and can be used in chemical manufacturing.
Cyanide smells of almonds.
The correct name (after IUPAC rules) is just hydrogen cyanide.
Hydrocyanic acid
cyclon b or hydrogen cyanide
Try breathing it, if you're still alive, it's not hydrogen cyanide.