yes bob
Ferric oxalate ----> Ferric oxide + Carbon monoxide + Carbon dioxideFe2(C2O4)3 ----> Fe2O3 + 3 CO + 3 CO2
No. Carbonic acid can only exist while dissolved in water. Otherwise it decomposes into carbon dioxide and water.
No. Carbonic acid is a compound of 3 elements: carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. It will, however, readily break down into water and carbon dioxide, which are compounds.
When water reacts with steam and carbon monoxide at very high temperatures, a series of complex chemical reactions can occur. One possible outcome is the formation of hydrogen gas and carbon dioxide. This process may involve water gas shift reactions and gasification of carbon monoxide to produce these products.
When carbon dioxide reacts with water, it forms carbonic acid (H2CO3) in a reversible reaction. This acid can further dissociate into hydrogen ions (H+) and bicarbonate ions (HCO3-), which can then further dissociate into hydrogen ions and carbonate ions (CO3^2-). So the final products are carbonic acid, hydrogen ions, bicarbonate ions, and carbonate ions.
Ferric oxalate ----> Ferric oxide + Carbon monoxide + Carbon dioxideFe2(C2O4)3 ----> Fe2O3 + 3 CO + 3 CO2
Carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, carbonic acid, carbonates, and bicarbonates are inorganic.
Carbon monoxide is sometimes referred to as CO or as "the silent killer" because it is odorless and colorless, making it difficult to detect without a carbon monoxide detector.
The carbonic acid decomposes, causing water and carbon dioxide - you see the carbon dioxide as bubbles.
Carbonic acid (2CHO3) decomposses into: CO2 and 2H2O.
No. Carbonic acid can only exist while dissolved in water. Otherwise it decomposes into carbon dioxide and water.
When carbonic acid decomposes we get carbon dioxide and water. Other substances may be present too, depending on which raising agent is used to produce the carbonic acid.
It depends on which Carbon oxide you are using. For example Carbon dioxide produces Carbonic acid while Carbon monoxide produces Formic acid.
No. Carbonic acid is a compound of 3 elements: carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. It will, however, readily break down into water and carbon dioxide, which are compounds.
When water reacts with steam and carbon monoxide at very high temperatures, a series of complex chemical reactions can occur. One possible outcome is the formation of hydrogen gas and carbon dioxide. This process may involve water gas shift reactions and gasification of carbon monoxide to produce these products.
Metallic oxides would not normally decompose as such. Most can be smelted with some form of carbon, in which case carbon monoxide or carbon dioxide is formed.
When carbon dioxide reacts with water, it forms carbonic acid (H2CO3) in a reversible reaction. This acid can further dissociate into hydrogen ions (H+) and bicarbonate ions (HCO3-), which can then further dissociate into hydrogen ions and carbonate ions (CO3^2-). So the final products are carbonic acid, hydrogen ions, bicarbonate ions, and carbonate ions.