Most likely you'll get an explosion that creates carbon dioxide and water. But that will only happen if you get the mixture hot enough or the pressure is high enough.
Iron would require a higher amount of heat due to the fact that it is a metal and has stronger bonds than water does. Water is made up of hydrogen bonds which allow it to heat up quickly.
um i am very sorry but i am not sure why dont you try to google it if you dont know !
Aluminium
they do not form when heated! they form crystals when they are frozen bu a freezer or room tempreature.
The end that is being heated should be hotter than the other end.
Carbon burn in air.
A gas as carbon dioxide is easily expanded by heating; hydrogen peroxide is decomposed.
I am almost positive that it explodes
when natural gas is strongly heated, hydrogen(H) and carbon(C) are obtained.
If a solid is heated to give off carbon dioxide and water, it must contain at carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen atoms. One such substance is the bicarbonate ion, which is formed from hydrogen and water with the loss of a proton. In fact, when salts of this ion are sufficiently heated, they decompose to water and carbon dioxide.
It decomposes into calcium oxide and carbon dioxide
Here is the reaction:CaCO3(s) ==heat==> CaO(s) + CO2(g) So, when calcium carbonate is heated, you get calcium oxide and carbon dioxide gas.
copper sulphate and hydrogen is released.
Bread is organic, therefore it contains Carbon and Hydrogen. When bread is heated is burns which releases Carbon (black), Carbon dioxide, Carbon monoxide, and water vapour.
It turns cloudy white.
Hey there......... when water is heated the molecules of water i.e. Hydrogen and oxygen gets heated and get lite and forms vapour which is carried on by air
when formic acid is heated upto 575k it reduced to hydrogen and cabon di oxide HCOOHH2+CO2