Carbon monoxide (CO) is a diatomic molecule with two atoms: carbon (C) and oxygen (O).
Mono-oxide;I think
carbon dye oxide
Carbonic oxide or Carbon(II)oxide
The reaction between magnesium oxide and carbon at 2000C to form magnesium metal and carbon monoxide is an example of the reduction of magnesium oxide to magnesium metal.
That can easily be determined by looking at the name carbon monoxide you need to beak it down. This molecule has 2 part, 1 of which has a descriptor Carbon mon oxide carbon is an element, so no further info needed from that part mon is a prefix that means one, so one oxide oxide is oxygen. so carbon monoxide is 1 carbon atom attached to 1 oxygen atom.
Two in carbon MONoxide (1 Carbon + 1 Oxygen -->MONO-oxide ) Three in carbon DIoxide (1 Carbon + 2 Oxygen -->DIoxide )
Carbon monoxide is a type of molecule. It contains 1 carbon atom and 1 oxygen atom
Carbonic oxide or Carbon(II)oxide
neutral
It isa type of chemical that is mixed with the sulphate-oxide and carbon monoxide to order to perform an epxlosion.
carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, iron oxide, nitric oxide, sulfricoxide, zinc oxide, calcium oxide, aluminumoxide, and any rust on any type of metals or any solution including oxygen has a suffix of oxide.
nitrous oxide
Do you mean carbon dioxide(carbon IV oxide - CO2) or carbon monoxide CO
Because also exist the carbon dioxide - CO2.
There is no single compound called carbon oxide. There are two oxides of carbon: carbon monoxide (CO) and carbon dioxide (CO2). Both are compounds.
If the reduction involves carbon getting oxidized, it would be... Zinc oxide + carbon -----------> Zinc + carbon monoxide that's ZnO + C ----------> Zn + CO or if the reduction involves carbon monoxide getting oxidized, it would be... Zinc oxide + carbon monoxide -----------------> Zinc + carbon dioxide that's ZnO + CO ----------> Zn + CO2
Several types of carbon monoxide detectors exist: biomimetic, electrochemical, metal oxide semiconductor.
Nope, it is a neutral gas! all mono oxide gases are neutral..!
It depends on which Carbon oxide you are using. For example Carbon dioxide produces Carbonic acid while Carbon monoxide produces Formic acid.