The reactant is magnesium carbonate.
Reactant(s) are the starting material/chemical to a reactiion Product(s) are the final material/chemical at the end of a reaction.
is the reactant which will be used up in the reaction, before the other reactant(s)
The limiting reactant, by definition, will be completely converted to the desired product. If one reactant is substantially more expensive than the other reactant(s), it is monetarily sensible to make the most expensive reactant the limiting one, so that the total material cost per unit of product will be minimized.
The symbol of sulphur is S. It is placed in group-16
The reactant is magnesium carbonate.
Reactant(s) are the starting material/chemical to a reactiion Product(s) are the final material/chemical at the end of a reaction.
Generic format is Reactant ( plus reactant(s)) = Product + (Product(s))
is the reactant which will be used up in the reaction, before the other reactant(s)
A reactant or reactants enters into a chemical reaction to form product(s)
No, it isn't. That is: since it's there as the symbol of an element, and not in a chemical reaction, it's neither a reactant nor a product... it's just a chemical.
The limiting reactant, by definition, will be completely converted to the desired product. If one reactant is substantially more expensive than the other reactant(s), it is monetarily sensible to make the most expensive reactant the limiting one, so that the total material cost per unit of product will be minimized.
The symbols and formulas are used to recognize chemical elements and chemical compounds.
IUPAC (International Union for Pure and Applied Chemistry) has rules for writing chemical symbols and formulas. They are valid in all languages.For compounds search in a library Nomenclature of inorganic compounds and Nomenclature of organic compounds, with the text adapted to your language, if necessary.See the links below.
Uh ... Yes. His 'S' symbol is the same as his 'S' symbol.
Heat will be on the product side of the equation, but it is not a "product" in the same sense as the chemical symbol(s) and/or formula(s) written on this side of the equation, because heat is not a tangible substance but rather an increase in the energy of nearby substances.
this is because it removes water molecule(s) from the reactant.