Zn(s) + CuO(s) → ZnO(s) + Cu(s)
Copper metal and Zinc Oxide is formed.
Copper plus oxygen react to form copper oxide. This reaction can be represented by the chemical equation: 4Cu + O2 → 2Cu2O.
It depends what the metal is, but any metal combined with oxygen will be an oxide, for example: Copper + Oxygen = Copper Oxide.
A compound containing a metal plus oxygen would be a metal oxide. For example: Sodium plus oxygen would produce Sodium oxide, Bismuth and Oxygen would produce Bismuth oxide, Zinc plus Oxyen would produce Zinc oxide and so on.
There are two different copper oxide formula's:2Cu + O2 -> 2CuO (black Copper(II) oxide)or4Cu + O2 -> 2Cu2O (red Copper(I) oxide)
oxygen
Copper oxide reacts with carbon dioxide to form copper carbonate. This reaction can be represented by the chemical equation: CuO + CO2 -> CuCO3.
This is a chemical reaction known as a displacement reaction. Zinc has a higher reactivity than copper, so when zinc is added to copper oxide, it displaces copper from the compound forming zinc oxide and copper metal. This reaction occurs because metals higher in the reactivity series can displace metals lower in the series from their compounds.
You get the metal hydroxide instead of the metal oxide. This happens with extremely reactive metals such as sodium. 2Na + 2H2O --> 2NaOH +H2
I know that carbon plus oxygen equals iron and iron is what kills stars...
When a metal oxide reacts with a nonmetal oxide, they will typically form a salt. The metal from the metal oxide will combine with the nonmetal from the nonmetal oxide, often forming an ionic compound. The specific product will depend on the reactants involved.
Copper oxides are Cu2O - copper(I) oxide and CuO - copper(II) oxide.
A metal oxide reacting with a nonmetal oxide typically results in the formation of a salt. This reaction can be classified as a synthesis or combination reaction, where the metal cation from the metal oxide combines with the nonmetal anion from the nonmetal oxide to form a salt.