Aluminum occurs as individual aluminum atoms while oxygen normally occurs in the form of molecules each containing 2 oxygen atoms, hence the formula O2
Aluminium + Oxygen = Aluminium Oxide 2 Al + O2 = 2AlO2
No, it is Aluminium(III) oxide, not dioxide:2 Al + 3 O2 ----> 2 Al2O3
The ionic formula for Aluminium Oxide is Al2O3. This compound is formed by the combination of aluminium (Al) cations with a +3 charge and oxygen (O) anions with a -2 charge.
The state symbol for aluminum oxide is solid (s).
Sounds like an acid metal reaction to produce hydrogen gas, so I will assume you meant hydrochloric acid. Complete reaction indicates aluminum is limiting and drives the reaction. 2Al + 6HCl --> 2AlCl3 + 3H2 3.0 moles Al (3 moles H2/2 moles Al) = 4.5 mole hydrogen gas produced =========================
Aluminium + Oxygen ----> Aluminium oxideBalanced equation:4 Al + 3 O2 ----> 2 Al2O3
When aluminum and oxygen combine, they form aluminum oxide. This process is known as oxidation. Aluminum oxide forms a thin, protective layer on the surface of the aluminum, which helps prevent further corrosion and degradation.
Aluminium may corrode but the newly formed layer of aluminum oxide stops the corrosive oxygen from reaching the bottom layers and so prevents further corrosion. Corrosion of aluminum can be expressed by the formula: 2 Al + 3 O2 ------> 2 Al2O3
The balanced formula equation when aluminum chlorate is heated is: 2 Al(ClO3)3(s) -> 2 AlCl3(s) + 9 O2(g)
Yes.Explanationary:27 g Al = 1.0 mole Al24 g = 1.5 mole O2 so this ratio (in mole) is 1:1.52Al + 3O2 --> Al2O3 so the balanced mole ratio is 2:3 or 1:1.5
In the reaction 4 moles of aluminum will react with 3 moles of oxygen to form 2 moles of aluminum oxide. Since we have 2.0 moles of aluminum, we would need (2.0 mol Al) x (3 mol O2 / 4 mol Al) = 1.5 moles of O2 to react with it.
Oxygen is also known as O2, referring to the diatomic molecule composed of two oxygen atoms.