S + O2 à SO2
This is a combustion reaction
Not a combustion reaction. Combustion reactions produce CO2 and H2O.
0.09
This reaction is an example of a 'hydration' or 'addition' reaction of alkenes: (ethene + water) C2H4 + H2O --> C2H5OH (ethanol) The reaction is catalysed by H+ ions (acid)
0.16
Glucose plus oxygen equals carbon dioxide and water plus energy
Copper sulfide reacts with exces oxygen to produce copper and sulfur dioxide. This could be in the industrial production of copper from copper ores.
2PbS+3O2 goes to 2SO2+ 2PbO
One reaction is calcium carbonate is calcium oxide plus carbon dioxide. Another reaction is carbon plus oxygen which equals carbon dioxide.
hydrogen sulfide + oxygen = water + sulfuer dioxide
The above reaction is a combination type reaction between silver (Ag) and sulfur (S)
3.82g of SO2 equals 0,06 moles.
Not a combustion reaction. Combustion reactions produce CO2 and H2O.
The chemical reaction is: CH4 + 2O2 --> 2H2O + CO2 CO2 is the carbon dioxide.
The most likely reaction is the formation of magnesium nitrate, carbon dioxide, and water.
C3H8 + 5O2 --> 3CO2 + 4H2OThis is a combustion reaction with propane. Always carbon dioxide and water as products.
rapid oxidation aka combustion aka burning process
2H+ + CO3^2- ==> H2CO3 ==> CO2 + H2O This is acid + carbonateFor a specific reaction, such as 2HCl + Na2CO3 ==> 2NaCl + H2CO3 ==> CO2 + H2OSO, answer to the question is salt plus CO2 and H2O