H+ can be used since it represents acid. But you also must balance e- (electrons) which also have a charge. So, the question is a little ambiguous.
a balance equation when it come to bio is that the input be exactly equal to the output. this will make the organism balanced with the environment it is in like a regulator fish in water. input=output. in chemistry: A balanced equation is used for chemical reactions. When the number of moles of reactants is equal to the number of moles of products, the equation is considered balanced. Search wikipedia for chemical equation for a step by step tutorial on how to balance chemical reaction equations.
If your goal is to balance the equation, then yes, you have to chose the coefficients.
To balance a chemical equation, you can change the coefficients (number of molecules). Remember: You cannot change the subscripts.When we balance an equation we change the number of atoms on one or both sides of the equation by means of simple mathematical calculation. That is, we change the number of molecules of one or more reactants or products. When the number of atoms of each element is equal on both sides of the equation, and cannot be reduced equally, the balancing process is complete.
GO to Google.com and type in balancing chemical equations and click the 3rd one. It balances it for you. Just type in the formula. :]
how do you write the balance equation of sucrose?
all equations balance as the theory of conservation of mass states that no mass should be lost, so all equations should balance
the equation Fe + Cl2 = FeCl3 would be balanced as...2Fe + 3Cl2 = 2FeCl3
Which of the following are steps for balancing chemical equations? Check all that apply. B. Choose coefficients that will balance the equation. And D. Recheck the numbers of each atom on each side of the equation to make sure the sides are equal. Apex
Whatever you want. You can start with whichever element that isn't balanced
the term 'balanced' in science refers to balancing an equation. For example, if your equation is HCl --> (yields) H + Cl, there has to be an equal amount of H and Cl on both sides of the equation, making it balanced.
a balance equation when it come to bio is that the input be exactly equal to the output. this will make the organism balanced with the environment it is in like a regulator fish in water. input=output. in chemistry: A balanced equation is used for chemical reactions. When the number of moles of reactants is equal to the number of moles of products, the equation is considered balanced. Search wikipedia for chemical equation for a step by step tutorial on how to balance chemical reaction equations.
It is important to balance the equation, so that you know the exact ratio of reactants required and products formed. If you don't consult a balanced equation, some of your reactant may not completely consume in reaction or sufficient product is not formed during experiments.
Mark off points, usually. If you're asking how to balance one, that depends upon the equation in question. Most freshman chemistry textbooks will have a section on redox reactions that includes a method for balancing equations that will probably handle anything you're likely to come across.
There is no easy method to balancing equations, you just have to check each side of the equation to ensure that it has an equal number of each atom: 2K + 2H2O --------> H2 + 2KOH
If your goal is to balance the equation, then yes, you have to chose the coefficients.
If an equation isn't balanced it means you're either making or destroying elements from nothing, which isn't possible.
As no chemical equations create or destroy new molecules, both sides need to be balanced to show the same amount of each element is on either side of the equation.