Carbon Dioxide and a very tiny bit of Carbon Monoxide
carbon dioxide
When an element burns in air, it reacts with oxygen to form a compound known as an oxide. The specific oxide formed depends on the element being burned. For example, when carbon burns, it forms carbon dioxide (CO2) and when magnesium burns, it forms magnesium oxide (MgO).
carbon dioxide and water
Oxides are the type of compound that is typically formed when an element is burned in air. Oxides are compounds composed of an element combined with oxygen.
Diamonds are formed from carbon.
When you burn any hydrocarbon (a compound of carbon and hydrogen) in air (oxygen being the reactant), carbon dioxide and water are produced.
Carbon is in most of the chemicals in living things and is in the air in carbon dioxide gas.
No, air in a bottle is not a compound. Air is a mixture of different gases, including nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and others. Compounds are substances formed by the chemical combination of two or more elements in fixed proportions, which is not the case with the gases in air.
Carbon burn in air.
carbon dioxide.
Oxygen can not burn in air.
When carbon is exposed to air nothing happens.