The balanced equation for the combustion of acetylene (C2H2) in air to form carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O) is:
2C2H2 + 5O2 -> 4CO2 + 2H2O
No, when oxygen burns, it combines with other elements to form oxides, not carbon dioxide. For example, when oxygen burns hydrocarbons, it forms carbon dioxide and water.
2C2H2(g) + 5O2(g) = 2H2O(g) + 4CO2(g) or, 2 Acetylene molecules + 5 Oxygen molecules = 2 water molecules + 4 Carbon dioxide molecules (+ energy)
I'd emagine the name would be ethane oxyde but i cant tell you the formula
The gas given out when coal burns is carbon dioxide (CO2).
All of them. At a high enough temperature, even diamond will burn, and produce (ridiculously expensive) carbon dioxide.
No, when oxygen burns, it combines with other elements to form oxides, not carbon dioxide. For example, when oxygen burns hydrocarbons, it forms carbon dioxide and water.
petrol consists of carbon and hydrogen, when it burns it produces carbon dioxide and water if complete combustion occurs
when a car is driven, the gasoline it burns as fuel releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
carbon dioxide
2C2H2(g) + 5O2(g) = 2H2O(g) + 4CO2(g) or, 2 Acetylene molecules + 5 Oxygen molecules = 2 water molecules + 4 Carbon dioxide molecules (+ energy)
Carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide
carbon dioxide, CO2
Any burning (oxidation reaction) produce carbon dioxide.
I'd emagine the name would be ethane oxyde but i cant tell you the formula
Sodium chloride (table salt) will not form water and carbon dioxide when it burns. When sodium chloride is heated, it may decompose into sodium and chlorine, but it does not produce water and carbon dioxide as products.
The gas given out when coal burns is carbon dioxide (CO2).