Carbon dioxide
combustion reaction!
In a combustion reaction of a hydrocarbon like methane (CH4) with oxygen, carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O) would be produced. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction would be CH4 + 2O2 → CO2 + 2H2O.
After combustion water and carbon dioxide are released.
No. If anything, a combustion reaction will consume hydrogen.
To determine the product of an unbalanced combustion reaction, we typically look for the reactants, which are usually a hydrocarbon and oxygen. During combustion, these reactants produce carbon dioxide and water as products. For a specific hydrocarbon, you would need to balance the equation to identify the exact amounts of CO₂ and H₂O produced. If you provide the unbalanced reaction, I can give you a more specific answer.
When a fuel burns, it undergoes a combustion reaction. Combustion has two main products. These products are water and carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is a necessary product of a combustion reaction involving a carbon-based fuel source. When the fuel undergoes combustion and reacts with oxygen, CO2 is produced along with heat and sometimes water vapor.
Combustion is a hemical reaction.
Combustion is a an oxydation reaction, a reaction with oxygen.
A combustion reaction is an oxidation reaction - combustion need oxygen; the products are water and carbon dioxide.
The combustion of hexane (C6H14) produces carbon dioxide (CO2) according to the reaction: C6H14 + 7O2 → 6CO2 + 7H2O. For every 1 gram of hexane burned, approximately 3.03 grams of carbon dioxide are produced. Therefore, from the combustion of B grams of hexane, the amount of carbon dioxide produced would be approximately 3.03B grams.
Combustion of metals forms metal oxides. Combustion of hydrocarbons, like methane, forms carbon dioxide and water.