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combustion
Answer this question… Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen
Because combustion reactions only occur with Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen.
The heat causes the carbon to bond with oxygen and form CO2. The hydrogen becomes Hydrogen Gas which is H2.
The vast majority of the energy output of the Sun is not produced by chemical combustion at all, but rather by nuclear fusion of hydrogen to helium.
No. If anything, a combustion reaction will consume hydrogen.
Hydrogen is a fuel for combustion, but cannot support it in the manner than oxygen can.
Yes, hydrogen burns.
Like a gas combustion engine, a hydrogen engine relies on the combustion process - in this case, combustion that results when hydrogen is combined with oxygen. Fuel cells in a hydrogen-powered car then convert this mechanical energy into electrical energy.
no
no
Hydrogen gas (dihydrogen or molecular hydrogen)[10] is highly flammable and will burn in air at a very wide range of concentrations between 4% and 75% by volume.[11] The enthalpy of combustion for hydrogen is −286 kJ/mol.Burning or combustion is the process of formation of oxides.Hydrogen reacts with o2 to give water & a lot of energy.
Hydrogen is an element, not a reaction. However, it is very combustible.
Combustion
yes
No; it is not combustion because in combustion substance react with oxygen first but in rusting the substance react with hydrogen first
supersonic combustion wave