O2(g)+2H2(g) -> 2H2O(g) (Remmeber heat/energy must also go into the reaction.) 2H2 + O2 ---> 2H2O
2 H2 + O2 ==> 2 H2O
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
When the combustion is complete, the balanced equation is: C7H16 + 11 O2 -> 7 CO2 + 8 H2O.
No equation, it is not a chemical reaction.
C + O2 = CO2 (an oxydation reaction)
Answer this question… Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen
yes
helium is chemically inert and doesn't undergo combustion reaction
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
When the combustion is complete, the balanced equation is: C7H16 + 11 O2 -> 7 CO2 + 8 H2O.
No equation, it is not a chemical reaction.
C + O2 = CO2 (an oxydation reaction)
Answer this question… Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen
Answer this question… Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen
No. If anything, a combustion reaction will consume hydrogen.
The balanced symbol equation for copper II oxide reacting with hydrogen is Cu + H2O. This reaction will create copper and water as a result.
A combustion reaction is a reaction that burns. The equation that represents a combustion reaction is CH4 + 2O2 reacts to yield CO2 + 2H2O.
2h2 + o2 2h2o