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WATER! H2O it is a combustion reaction and every combustion reaction produces carbon dioxide and water
When methane burns, the carbon dioxide and water formed, equal the mass of the methane plus the mass of the oxygen.
Sugar burns clean when the right amounts of it is mixed with the opposing oxidizer. Sugar burns into water vapor and carbon dioxide, and leaves behind the remains of the oxidizer reaction. There is no flammable product that sugar leaves behind after it burns. Even if it does, you cannot collect it, as the fire from the burning sugar would just go on to ignite that.
When paraffin burns in plenty of air, carbon dioxide and water vapor are formed
The reaction is:2 CO O2 = 2 CO2
It is a Oxidation reaction.
carbon- dioxide and carbon- monoxide
petrol consists of carbon and hydrogen, when it burns it produces carbon dioxide and water if complete combustion occurs
Carbon dioxide
Any burning (oxidation reaction) produce carbon dioxide.
WATER! H2O it is a combustion reaction and every combustion reaction produces carbon dioxide and water
carbon dioxide water
carbon burns in oxygen to form carbon dioxide. however, carbon monoxide can also be formed by incomplete combustion
When methane burns, the carbon dioxide and water formed, equal the mass of the methane plus the mass of the oxygen.
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.
The reaction is called oxidation; carbon dioxide and water are released.
water,carbon dioxide and soot