i have NO idea which math book ur talking about, so i dont know the answer, sorry!
The coefficients are the numbers written in front of the chemical formulas in a chemical equation, and tells how much of a certain substance is involved in the reaction. When there is no number, it is understood to be one. For example, the following equation, which represents the combustion of methane (CH4), could be read in a couple of different ways. CH4 + 2O2 --> CO2 + 2H2O One molecule of methane plus two molecules of oxygen produces one molecule of carbon dioxide plus two molecules of water. or One mole of methane plus two moles of oxygen produce one mole of methane plus two moles of water.
In short, yes. On the left side there is 1 Carbon, 4 Hydrogen and 4 Oxygen. There is the same amount on these on the right. Remember 2H20 is the same as H402. The 2 in front of the water acts upon everything in the molecule.
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200 g CH4 x 1 mole CH4/16 g = 12.5 moles CH4
Methane is CH4
the CH4 poler
No. CH4 is nonpolar.
ch4 is an atom.
Molecular formula: CH4 Structural formula: . H H C H . H CH4 (1 carbon and 4 hydrogen) it is NOT ch4 it is CH4; 4 being a subscript indicating 4 hydrogen atoms bonded into a single carbon atom
Assuming complete combustion: CH4 + 2O2 --> 2H2O + CO2.
CH4 is generally not considered an acid.
CH4 = Methane
CH4 is not a solid.It is a gas.
What are the similarities of ch4 and ccl4?