false
Oxidation.
False !
Water can be either a reactant, or a product. It really depends on the type of chemical equation. Here are examples of both water being on the reactant side, and the product side. Reactants 2H2O ===> 2H2 + O2 HCl + H2O ===> Cl- + H3O+ Products CH4 + 2O2 ===> CO2 + 2H2O 2H2O2 ===> 2H2O + O2
single replacement reaction
An Exothermic Reaction.
Plants release oxygen into the atmosphere as a by-product of photosynthesis.
That's a decomposition reaction. One reactant, two (or more) simpler products.
Every combustion reaction we deal with produces gas with oxygen in the product, so O2 (oxygen gas) must be a reactant. For example, methane reacts with Oxygen in this way: CH4(l) + O2(g) -> C02(g)+2H2(g) Note O2 in gaseous form as a reactant.
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)
Water can be either a reactant, or a product. It really depends on the type of chemical equation. Here are examples of both water being on the reactant side, and the product side. Reactants 2H2O ===> 2H2 + O2 HCl + H2O ===> Cl- + H3O+ Products CH4 + 2O2 ===> CO2 + 2H2O 2H2O2 ===> 2H2O + O2
decomposition reaction has only one reactant
single replacement reaction
binary compound
Yes. Any "burning" process is called combustion or "oxidation" as every substance burns only in the presence of oxygen and as oxygen is being "added" i.e., it is on the reactant side, it is termed as oxidation.
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An Exothermic Reaction.
The reactants for anaerobic respiration are two pyruvic acids from glycolysis what the hell?
The ratio is different for each type of reaction.
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