no
The correct answer is: Carbon dioxide and water.
When hydrocarbons are burned, carbon dioxide is formed. If the hydrocarbon is burned in low amount of oxygen, carbon monoxide can be formed. Carbon monoxide is harmful for animals.
Generally, the hydrocarbon undergoes a combustion reaction, forming water and carbon dioxide. The water formed may be in the form of water vapour. But in the case where oxygen is limited, the hydrocarbon may under incomplete combustion, forming a gaseous mixture of water, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and hydrogen.A hydrocarbon reacting with oxygen means burning the hydrocarbon. When hydrocarbons are burned, the oxides of the compound elements, such as CO2,H2O are formed. If the hydrocarbon contain elements like Nitrogen, sulfur, etc oxides of them can be formed.
No, carbonic acid is not a hydrocarbon. It is a weak acid formed from carbon dioxide dissolving in water. Hydrocarbons are compounds made up of hydrogen and carbon atoms only.
Carbon monoxide is formed during the burning of a hydrocarbon when there isn't enough oxygen present for complete combustion. Incomplete combustion of hydrocarbons can lead to the formation of carbon monoxide instead of carbon dioxide. It is a toxic gas and can be harmful to human health when inhaled.
A hydrocarbon.
it is a product
The combution process is two stage, carbon monoxide is formed first and if excess oxygen is present an the carbon monoxide reacts with additional oxygen to form carbon dioxide. 2C + O2 ---> 2CO + O2 ---> 2CO2
When a carbon compound is burned it is burned through a process called combustion (for example: the combustion of a hydrocarbon). The two substances that almost always form in a combustion of a carbon compound is ...... H20 ----water and CO2 --------- carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide are both formed from carbon and oxygen.and im awsome
Carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O) when hydrocarbons burn in oxygen, carbon dioxide and water are formed
Oxygen + organic molecule -------> carbon dioxide + water