Lead(II) oxide. Pb is lead. O is oxide.
The balanced chemical equation for the given reaction is: PbO2 + PbO -> 2PbO + O2 Coefficients: 1 PbO2, 1 PbO, 2 PbO, 1 O2.
The balanced chemical equation for the reaction between lead(II) oxide (PbO) and magnesium (Mg) is: 2PbO + 2Mg -> 2Pb + 2MgO
The chemical equation 2 PbO2 → 2 PbO + O2 represents a decomposition reaction. In this reaction, lead(IV) oxide (PbO2) breaks down into lead(II) oxide (PbO) and oxygen gas (O2). Decomposition reactions typically involve a single compound breaking down into two or more products.
Coefficients in a chemical equation represent the number of units of the formula immediately following the coefficient that are involved in the balanced equation for the reaction.
The chemical equation may be:PbO2 → Pb12O19 → Pb12O17 → Pb3O4 → PbO
CH3 is not a chemical equation, it is a chemical formula. CH3 is a methyl but, it can not be on its own.
A chemical equation is an expression in which symbols and formulae represent a chemical reaction. It shows the reactants on the left side and the products on the right side, with coefficients to balance the number of atoms on each side.
PbO
Formula: PbO
Yes.
A chemical equation represents a complete chemical reaction. It includes chemical formulas and symbols for reactants and products, as well as coefficients to balance the equation.
Lead (II) oxide (PbO) reacts with water to form lead hydroxide (Pb(OH)2). The chemical equation for this reaction is: PbO + H2O -> Pb(OH)2. This reaction is an example of a metal oxide reacting with water to form a metal hydroxide.