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That grade of gasoline has too much octane.
Chloride itself is not a substance. It is the ion formed by the element chlorine. Chlorine can react with oxygen but in most of its reactions it does not burn but rather causes other substances to "burn" much in the manner that oxygen does.
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They dont love each other so much. Actually Ge is readily oxidized to GeO2 by Oxygen. GeO2,not Ge ,dissolves into water 4.5gram in 1000 gram water.
Reaction of octane combustion- 2C8H18+25O2= 16CO2+ 18H2O That mean from 228g octane (16*22.4dm3) = 358.4dm3 of CO2 is produced. {because volume of each mole is 22.4dm3} Now, from 10 kg of octane produced volume of CO2 is = (358.4*10000)/228 =(15719.298 dm3/1000)m3 =15.719 m3.
There is no octane in gasoline... it is the equivalent of octane.
That grade of gasoline has too much octane.
Three atoms of oxygen are required to react with each two atoms of aluminum to form the most common product of reaction between oxygen and aluminum. Therefore, 0.75 mole of oxygen atoms will be required to react with 0.5 mole of aluminum atoms. The atomic weight of oxygen is 15.999; therefore, the mass will be (0.75)(15.999) = 12 grams of oxygen, to the maximum possibly justified number of significant digits.
12
12
$224 without a contract
6.3 pounds.
The magnesium has reacted already with as much oxygen that it can (1 atom of oxygen to 1 atom of magnesium). There are no spare magnesium atoms left so the reaction has stopped, There is no energetically favourable way that further oxygen atoms can react.
This really depends upon the kind of gas you are talking about. Nitrogen is a gas, and it does not react with oxygen at normal temperatures. Methane does react very readily with oxygen, although even then, you would need some kind of spark to set it off. A methane oxygen mixture does not so much burst into flames, as explode. It would burn all at once.
Chloride itself is not a substance. It is the ion formed by the element chlorine. Chlorine can react with oxygen but in most of its reactions it does not burn but rather causes other substances to "burn" much in the manner that oxygen does.
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3 pounds