Want this question answered?
Water is a reactant in photosythesis that is a liquid.
Yes, sucrose is the reactant.
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
There are two reactants. They are CO2 and water
The limiting reactant, by definition, will be completely converted to the desired product. If one reactant is substantially more expensive than the other reactant(s), it is monetarily sensible to make the most expensive reactant the limiting one, so that the total material cost per unit of product will be minimized.
Water is a reactant in photosythesis that is a liquid.
It is reactant!
Glucose and water
No, it is a product.
In some reactions water is a reactant, but in others it is a product. Ex: HCl + NaOH --> NaCl + water (water is a product) Na + water --> NaOH + hydrogen gas (water is a reactant)
Sodium react vigurously with water.
Yes, sucrose is the reactant.
Yes, sucrose is the reactant.
The process of photosynthesis is the same in both. However the presence of one important reactant, water, is scarce in a desert.
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
Both are reactants in this reaction.
There are two reactants. They are CO2 and water