4p+ 5o2= 2p2o5
The chemical equation for the reaction of phosphorus with oxygen to form phosphorus pentoxide is: 4 P + 5 O2 → P4O10.
The balanced equation for the reaction is P4O10 + 6H2O -> 4H3PO4.
P4 (s) + 6Cl2 (g) -> 4PCl3 (l)
The balanced equation for this reaction is: P4O10 + 6H2O → 4H3PO4.
Balanced Chemical equation
You r question does not make sense, as it ends in 'and?'. However, Phosphorus oxide is usually named as 'phosphorus pentoxide. The formula being 'P2O5'. Phosphorus pentoxide often form the dimer 'P4O10',
The chemical equation for the reaction of phosphorus with oxygen to form phosphorus pentoxide is: 4 P + 5 O2 → P4O10.
If there is an excess of air, the reaction should produce diphosphorus pentoxide as its only product. If additionally the phosphorus molecule is simply a phosphorus atom, the balanced equation is: 4 P + 5 O2 -> 2P2O5. If phosphorus is considered to form a tetraatomic molecule, the equation would be: P4 + 5 O2 -> 2 P2O5
Phosphorus burns at very high temperatures, about 1600-1800oC, phosphorus is the red tip at the end of a kitchen match. The chemical formula for the combustion of Phosphorus is: P4 + 5 O2 yields P4O10
The chemical formula for diphosphorous pentaoxide is P2O5.
According to my science teacher it's: P4 + (5)O2 = (2)P2O5 (The brackets are the balancing values).
The balanced equation for the reaction is P4O10 + 6H2O -> 4H3PO4.
P4 (s) + 6Cl2 (g) -> 4PCl3 (l)
If you are meaning phosphorus tribromide then it is PBr3
A balanced chemical equation has correct placed coefficients and a representative chemical equation need these coefficients.
The balanced equation for this reaction is: P4O10 + 6H2O → 4H3PO4.
Balanced Chemical equation