CH4(g) + H20(g) <----> CO(g) + 3H2(g)
Ch4 + 2o2 ---> 2h2o + co2
methane + oxygen -> carbon dioxide + water 2 Methane molecules plus 4 Oxygen molecules gives 2 molecules of Carbon dioxide plus 4 Water molecules.
Methane, CH4, burns in oxygen gas to form water and carbon dioxide. What is the correct balanced chemical equation for this reaction?
The chemical equation is:CH4 + 2 O2 = CO2 + 2 H2O
Hydroge oxygen +ho4 c2+carbon oxygen
The reactants are methane CH4 and oxygen O2 and the products are carbon dioxide CO2 and water H2O. CH4 + 2 O2 --> CO2 + 2 H2O
methane + oxygen -> carbon dioxide + water 2 Methane molecules plus 4 Oxygen molecules gives 2 molecules of Carbon dioxide plus 4 Water molecules.
o2
Methane, CH4, burns in oxygen gas to form water and carbon dioxide. What is the correct balanced chemical equation for this reaction?
It produces Bromomethane and Hydrogen Bromide Equation: CH4 + Br2 ----> CH3Br + HBr
zinc + ethanol + water + chloroform + copper sulphate solution
zinc + ethanol + water + chloroform + copper sulphate solution
The chemical equation is:CH4 + 2 O2 = CO2 + 2 H2O
Hydroge oxygen +ho4 c2+carbon oxygen
To the original questioneer: I've tried to split the wording of this question but it's still not understandable: "How would oxygen be represented in the f--ormula equation for the reaction of methane and oxygen to yield carbon dioxide and water -- A chemical reaction has NOT occurred if the products have -- " So could the questioneer please rephrase it? JdQ
Methane plus oxygen produces carbon dioxide and water.
When aluminum carbide reacts with water, the products of the reaction are aluminum hydroxide and methane gas. The balanced equation for this reaction is Al4C3 + 12H2O -->4Al(OH)3 + 3CH4(g)
Methane, CH4, burns in oxygen gas to form water and carbon dioxide. What is the correct balanced chemical equation for this reaction?