Alkali metals, for example:
2Me + 2H2O = 2MeOH + H2
Me is the metal
Carbon (C) doesn't react with water.
Water.
When acetone react with phenylhidrazine equation is phenylhidrazone of acetone, condensation product in which process water molecule eliminate.
The general equation for an acid-base reaction is: acid + base → salt + water. This represents the neutralization reaction that occurs when an acid and a base react to form a salt and water.
The equation for the reaction between water (H2O) and oxygen (O2) is 2H2O + O2 -> 2H2O2, which produces hydrogen peroxide.
The answer is Be(OH)2
Hydrochloric acid dissolves in water but does not react with it; there is no equation.
Technically salt does not react with water. It will dissolve in water which is not the same thing as causing a chemical reaction. Calcium by itself does not react with salt water -- it is dissolved into the water and is a crucial element of life for many salt-water species. Some compounds containing calcium may react with (or in) salt water.
Octane and water do not react and so there is not an equation.
When methane and oxygen react in a combustion reaction, carbon dioxide and water are produced, along with heat and light as energy is released. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is: CH4 + 2O2 → CO2 + 2H2O.
The balanced equation for the reaction of chromium with water is: 2 Cr + 6 H2O -> 2 Cr(OH)3 + 3 H2.
The most common set of metals that react with water at room temperature are the alkali metals, namely lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, cesium, and francium. while these metals react quite violently with water at room temperature, many if not most other metals have some sort of reaction with water at room temperature (IE, iron rusting in water)