A mircale.
Oxygen cannot bond with a single element to form carbon dioxide and water.
Simply by fact that oxygen contains neither carbon nor hydrogen, required to form those products.
I guess you're reffering to a compound such as methane (a fuel).
Those reactions are called combustion reactions.
What would be the reaction when water vapor passed on red hot carbon?
It is a chemical process. The nitroglycerin decomposes into water vapor, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, and oxygen.
This is a combustion reaction methanol + oxygen -> carbon dioxide + water vapor (This is the formula for a complete combustion and there is a fuel methanol reacting with oxygen to create carbon dioxide and water vapor)
By expiration carbon dioxide is released.
Burning a fuel is a chemical change. Two or more substances are combined and new substances are produced with different properties than the original substances. In other words the gas and oxygen in the air are combined to form carbon dioxide and smoke.
Because a chemical change results in the formation of 1 or more new substances and a new compound is created, methane burns with a smokey flame that forms carbon dioxide and water, which makes it a chemical reaction.
it would be a chemical reaction mArKe ^_^
The reaction of hydrocarbon (i.e. wax) with oxygen Hydrocarbon + oxygen --> water + carbon dioxide
a) oxygen does not burn b) oxygen combines with the fuel - it is NOT a catalyst. c) a fire does acellerate when oxygen is added.
Carbon from the gasoline combines with oxygen to form carbon dioxide. Thehydrogen from the gasoline combines with oxygen to form water vapor.
It is a chemical process. The nitroglycerin decomposes into water vapor, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, and oxygen.
When combustion occurs, due to the chemical reaction carbon dioxide and water are always formed.
This is a combustion reaction methanol + oxygen -> carbon dioxide + water vapor (This is the formula for a complete combustion and there is a fuel methanol reacting with oxygen to create carbon dioxide and water vapor)
2c2h6 + 7o2 ---> 4co2 + 6h2o
Chemical nature or chemical properties of the wood
no it is not
True. Flammability is a chemical property of matter. It is not a physical property of matter. When wood burns, it changes to ashes, carbon dioxide, water vapor, and other gases. After burning, it is no longer wood.
By expiration carbon dioxide is released.