No. The correct one is
CO + H2O ----> HCOOH (Formic acid)
redox
Some of them have the following formulas: H2O, CO, CO2, N2O, NO, and NO2.
H (hydrogen)
A complete combustion reaction will produce CO2 and H2O, while an incomplete combustion reaction produces CO and H2O.
CO2 + C → 2CO Carbon dioxide combines with carbon to form carbon monoxide (in the laboratory) by passing CO2 over heated charcoal. In the environment, it is formed by incomplete oxidation of hydrocarbons.
2 C6H6(l) + 15 O2(g) --> 12 CO2(g) + 6 H2O(l)
The equation is H2CO3 --> H2O + CO2
H2 - hydrogen.
The correct answer is co2+c= 2co
Keq = [H2O][CO] [H2][CO2]
-5*10^50 KJ/liter*seconds
This is an exothermic reaction.
CO2
The anwer is 2 (C2H6) + 7(O2) =4 (CO2) + 6 ( H2O) left side : C=4 , H= 12, O=14 right side : C=4 , H= 12, O=14 so they are balanced.
Synthesis E + C > C E + E > C
combustion. O2 + C = CO2 + H2O a rough estimation. Carbon (or hydrogen) is consumed along with oxygen, and co2, co, and h2o are produced as a byproduct.
Some of them have the following formulas: H2O, CO, CO2, N2O, NO, and NO2.
exhaust