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hydrocarbons have only carbon and hydrogen , on complete combustion they react with oxygen of air and form only CO2 and H2O molecules...
No. Hydrogen and oxygen react with each other to form water.
Alkali earth metals react with oxygen to form basic oxides.
Burning, in the conventional sense, is combustion, a rapid, heat-releasing reaction with oxygen. Petrol is composed primarily of hydrocarbons, that is, compounds consisting entirely of carbon and hydrogen. Both of these elements will readily bond with oxygen, and, in fact, are more stable when bonded with oxygen than with each other. In complete combustion, these hydrocarbons will react with oxygen to form carbon dioxide and water vapor. Water, on the other hand, consists of hydrogen bonded with oxygen. So water is essentially hydrogen oxide. The hydrogen in water is already fully oxidized, and so it will not react any further with oxygen.
When a hydrocarbon burns, it reacts with oxygen to form carob dioxide and water vapor. As both of these are gasses, they wil drift away. When a metal react with oxygen, it forms a metal oxide, and metal oxides are solid.
Hydrogen and oxygen undergo combination reaction to form water.When hydrogen and oxygen react together, water is formed.
Steel and oxygen react together to form rust.
Yes. They react to form lead (II) oxide.
When ozone react with UV, oxygen is formed. Nascent oxygen is also formed with it.
What happens when iron and oxygen react?
Hydrogen an react with oxygen to form water and not helium
Yes, gold can react with oxygen to form gold oxide.