It's called an acid. Lets say there's an acid with the chemical formula HA. When it is dissolved in water, it breaks up.
HA <----> H+ + A-
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Decomposition reactions always have one complex reactant and two or more simpler products.
Decomposition
The products of the decomposition are different.
Hydrogen and oxygen are the products of electroysis of water .
The products of the decomposition of hydrogen peroxide are water and oxygen, as shown in the following equation: 2 H2O2 → 2 H2O + O2
Oxygen and hydrogen are the products of the electrolysis.
The products in a decomposition reaction depend on what the reactants are in that decomposition reaction. The products will be different depending on the reactants.
If CaCO3 (calcium carbonate) were to decompose, it would likely result in CaO (calcium oxide) and CO2 (carbon dioxide).
If CaCO3 (calcium carbonate) were to decompose, it would likely result in CaO (calcium oxide) and CO2 (carbon dioxide).
The chemical products of decomposition depend on what is decomposing. That it, it depends on the reactant.
No. Burning any flammable, hydrogen-containing compound will produce water, though there will be other products as well. You can also produce water through acid-base reactions and the decomposition of carbohydrates.
H2o
2 molecules of ethanol and 2 molecules of carbon dioxide
decomposition
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A chemical reaction that breaks down a compound into simpler products is a decomposition reaction. For example, when electrolyzed, water will be decomposed into hydrogen and oxygen gas. Decomposition reactions involve one reactant and multiple products.