A hydrocarbon and oxygen
Combustion is an oxidation reaction - a reaction with oxygen.
a combustion reaction does not produce a precipitate an example is 2C4H10 + 13O2 -> 8CO2 + 10H2O
Combustion: A combustion reaction is when oxygen combines with another compound to form water and carbon dioxide. These reactions are exothermic, meaning they produce heat. An example of this kind of reaction is the burning of napthalene:C10H8 + 12 O2---> 10 CO2 + 4 H2O
combustion and single-replacement
Combustion reactions are very valuable and useful to humans in several ways. One important combustion reaction takes place in an internal combustion engine.
Because combustion is a reaction with oxygen.
Combustion is an oxidation reaction - a reaction with oxygen.
a combustion reaction does not produce a precipitate an example is 2C4H10 + 13O2 -> 8CO2 + 10H2O
exothermic reactions are the reactions which give out heat and endothermic reactions are the reaction which absorb heat.so combustion is an exothermic reaction.
Combustion reactions
Nitrogen is not a reaction, it is a chemical element. It is not normally involved in combustion reactions.
Not a combustion reaction. Combustion reactions produce CO2 and H2O.
No. Acid + alkali reactions are neutralisation reactions. Combustion is a reaction with oxygen.
NO ... all burning/combustion reactions are exothermic.
There are many different reactions that form water, the combustion of organic molecules, neutralisation reactions to name a few but you could not tell the mechanism of a reaction by that it forms water
Yes, combustion is a chemical reaction, because it is a reaction between a molecule and oxygen (O2) to produce a new molecule plus CO2 (if it's a complete combustion) or CO (if it is an incomplete combustion). Combustion is also an exothermic reaction, which means that heat is released.
For any combustion reaction O2 is required .