The chemical reaction is:
2 PbO + C = 2 Pb + CO2
lead oxide + carbon-> lead + carbon dioxide
When lead oxide is heated with carbon, carbon dioxide and lead are formed as the products 2PbO+C -->CO2+2Pb
lead oxide
Lead Oxide + Sulfur Dioxide
1,4 moles of lead(II) oxide are formed.
lead
Lead
Lead being less electropositive will be given out
You get Lead and Carbon dioxide. Of course, you have to heat them. no idk help me :0
lead oxide + carbon-> lead + carbon dioxide
easy! you would need to add universal indicator and if the pH turned alkaline you would know it was a metal. if it turned acidic however, it would show the characteristics of a non metal. grace x aged 14
If you could get a high enough temp. you could heat it in a retort of some kind and collect the oxygen given off and lead would be left. The old school way was to heat the lead oxide on a block of carbon using a bunsen and blow pipe to provide extra oxygen for a hotter flame. The extra heat caused the oxygen from the lead oxide to combine with the carbon to form carbon dioxide and lead was left on the carbon block.
Lead oxide is not a metal. Why?Lead is metal by itself, lead oxide is metal oxide, meaning it is a chemical compound that contains at least one atom of oxygen (thus oxide) and one other element (being a metal oxide, that one other element has to be metal, in this case lead).
No.Lead (ii) carbonate --> lead (ii) oxide + carbon
When lead oxide is heated with carbon, carbon dioxide and lead are formed as the products 2PbO+C -->CO2+2Pb
lead oxide
It is endothermic