Combustion of Ethane:
2C2H6+7O2-->4CO2+6H2O
Combustion of Ethanol:
C2H5OH+3O2-->2CO2+3H2O
The chemical reaction is:
C2H5OH + O2 = CO2 + H2O
C2h5oh + 3o2 -> 2co2 + 3h2o
naphathalene(solid)->naphathalene(liquid)
That question is too vague. I'm assuming you mean a little frozen ethanol into a larger volume of liquid ethanol. This being the case, the ethanol will melt. That's it.
No, ethanol is an organic basic liquid, wine and beer contain ethanol, and it is flammable
ethanol is a type of alcohol, in the oxygenated hydrocarbon class of compounds. when it combines rapidly with oxygen in a combustion reaction, the ethanol is used up, and with oxygen forms carbon dioxide and water. ethanol is quite literally gone, it is broken down and reformed into new products, which is the definition of a chemical reaction.
The heat of Formation of liquid Ethanol is -277 kJ/mol Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_enthalpy_change_of_formation_(data_table)
naphathalene(solid)->naphathalene(liquid)
Under ideal circumstances the following:C2H6O + 3 O2 ---> H2O + 2 CO2it's real simple once you know the products
The question is not clear , if it is for the combustion of ethanol then 25litre of oxygen is in large excess for 25 ml of ethanol.
Liquid.
Ethanol is a colourless liquid.
Ethanol is indeed a liquid at standard temperature and pressure.
Complete combustion is easy. Incomplete combustion is trickier, because there really isn't such a thing as the balanced equation for that, there are several possible balanced equations for that.
Burning anything (a liquid or a solid) is a chemical change and the reaction is known as a combustion reaction.
That question is too vague. I'm assuming you mean a little frozen ethanol into a larger volume of liquid ethanol. This being the case, the ethanol will melt. That's it.
No, ethanol is an organic basic liquid, wine and beer contain ethanol, and it is flammable
ethanol e-Liquid
Liquid.