All are gases.
Ionic
Methane has no effect on the ozone layer. Ozone cannot get to the carbon atom, so they coexist happily. However, oxygen in the stratosphere does experience a chemical reaction with methane. Emissions of methane are transformed into water, according to the formula CH4 + 2O2 --> CO2 + 2(H2O). Ozone is O3, so it is unaffected.
6 molecules of oxygen are needed to react with 3 methane molecules as one molecule of oxygen ( O2) are needed for methane gas.
Combustion products of methane would be water and CO2. Methane is CH4. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methane
The answer is oxygen. Oxygen is an element and its most common form is as O2 , another form or "allotrope" is ozone, O3. The others are compounds because they contain two or more different elements, water, H2O methane, CH4 Carbon dioxide, CO2
Methane reacts with oxygen in the following way. CH4 + 3 O2 --> CO2 + 4 H2O. If 5 moles of oxygen react with 2.8 moles of methane, only 1.67 moles of methane would be consumed because of the molar ratio 1:3. This would produce 1.67 moles of carbon dioxide and 6.67 moles of water.
Methane has no effect on the ozone layer. Ozone cannot get to the carbon atom, so they coexist happily. However, oxygen in the stratosphere does experience a chemical reaction with methane. Emissions of methane are transformed into water, according to the formula CH4 + 2O2 --> CO2 + 2(H2O). Ozone is O3, so it is unaffected.
Methane is CH4
6 molecules of oxygen are needed to react with 3 methane molecules as one molecule of oxygen ( O2) are needed for methane gas.
The reactants are methane CH4 and oxygen O2 and the products are carbon dioxide CO2 and water H2O. CH4 + 2 O2 --> CO2 + 2 H2O
Combustion products of methane would be water and CO2. Methane is CH4. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methane
The answer is oxygen. Oxygen is an element and its most common form is as O2 , another form or "allotrope" is ozone, O3. The others are compounds because they contain two or more different elements, water, H2O methane, CH4 Carbon dioxide, CO2
Most oxygen is found as a diatomic molecule. (Yes, there is some ozone, but not much down here. And it's unstable, spontaneously reverting to O2 in a few minutes.) There are two atoms of oxygen in an oxygen molecule. Methane is a carbon atom bonded to four hydrogen atoms. O2 and CH4 are the oxygen and methane molecules.
Yes, the products of CH4 + O2 (Methane + Insufficient Oxygen) are water and carbon monoxide.
The reactants are CH4, O2 and the products are CO2, H2O. CH4 + 2O2 -> CO2 + 2H2O
Hydrogen combines with oxygen at the completion of a combustion reaction to form water. The following is the balanced equation for the combustion of methane (CH4). CH4 + 2O2 ---> CO2 + 2H2O
methane+oxyen-->carbon dioxide+waste CH4 O2 CO2 H2O
Methane reacts with oxygen in the following way. CH4 + 3 O2 --> CO2 + 4 H2O. If 5 moles of oxygen react with 2.8 moles of methane, only 1.67 moles of methane would be consumed because of the molar ratio 1:3. This would produce 1.67 moles of carbon dioxide and 6.67 moles of water.