In elemental' form it is any multiple from :
nCO2 + (n-1)H2O -->(gives)--> CnH2n-2On-1 + nO2
CnH2n-2On-1 is a carbohydrate (n)polymere, like cellulose and starch etc.
If your goal is to balance the equation, then yes, you have to chose the coefficients.
Sulphuric acid + Zinc ----> Zinc sulphate + Hydrogen H2SO4 + Zn ----> ZnSO4 + H2 (no balancing needed)
a balance equation when it come to bio is that the input be exactly equal to the output. this will make the organism balanced with the environment it is in like a regulator fish in water. input=output. in chemistry: A balanced equation is used for chemical reactions. When the number of moles of reactants is equal to the number of moles of products, the equation is considered balanced. Search wikipedia for chemical equation for a step by step tutorial on how to balance chemical reaction equations.
H+ can be used since it represents acid. But you also must balance e- (electrons) which also have a charge. So, the question is a little ambiguous.
No because you always keep an equation in balance when solving it
If your goal is to balance the equation, then yes, you have to chose the coefficients.
Balancing only allows you to change the coefficients, NOT the subscripts.
The equation for balanced photosynthesis is: 6CO2 + 6H2O ------> C6H12O6 + 6O2
Its balancing is very simple, 2SO2 + O2 = 2SO3
Whatever you want. You can start with whichever element that isn't balanced
Yes balance is a verb. Balancing is the present participle of balance. They are balancing on a tight rope.
When you are balancing known reactants and known products which is always the case when you are asked to "balance" a chemical equation you must not change the subscripts as that changes the reactants or the products to a different chemical compound.
The purpose of a chemical equation balancer is to balance the equation, so nothing blows up and you are kept nice and safe from any harm that might of happen.
the term 'balanced' in science refers to balancing an equation. For example, if your equation is HCl --> (yields) H + Cl, there has to be an equal amount of H and Cl on both sides of the equation, making it balanced.
6CO2 + 6H2O+ sunlight--> C6H12O6 + 6O2+energy (in presence of chlorophyll)
Which of the following are steps for balancing chemical equations? Check all that apply. B. Choose coefficients that will balance the equation. And D. Recheck the numbers of each atom on each side of the equation to make sure the sides are equal. Apex
It is a single displacement reaction. No balancing is needed in the resulting equation. Zn + CuBr2 ----> ZnBr2 + Cu