Mg(s) + 3/2 O2(g) + C(s) ----> MgCO3(s)
The balanced equation for the reaction between HNO3 and NaHCO3 is: 2 HNO3 + NaHCO3 → NaNO3 + H2O + CO2
The coefficient for water in the balanced equation is 6.
Mg(s) + 2AgNO3(aq) _> Mg(NO3)2(aq) + 2Ag(s)
No, the balanced equation is 6Ca + 3O2 ---> 6CaO. The product, calcium oxide, is CaO and not CaO2.
2AgNO3 + MgBr2 ----> 2AgBr + Mg(NO3 ) 2
2 Mg + CO2 = 2 MgO + C The reaction is possible only at high temperature.
This is not 'the balanced equation' of MgSO, what is meant is the chemical FORMULA of magnesium sulfate or magnesium sulfite.These are: MgSO4 and MgSO3respectively.
The balanced equation for the reaction between magnesium (Mg) and hydrochloric acid (HCl) is: Mg + 2HCl → MgCl2 + H2
The balanced equation for lithium carbonate is Li2CO3.
CO2 is not an equation, so it cannot be balanced. It is a chemical formula.
The balanced equation for the conversion of carbon dioxide (CO2) to carbon monoxide (CO) is: 2CO2 → 2CO + O2
The balanced equation for Mg + O2 is 2Mg + O2 → 2MgO.
6CO2 + 6H20 +energy yields C6H12O6 + 6O2. This is the equation for photosynthesis.
The balanced equation for the reaction between HNO3 and NaHCO3 is: 2 HNO3 + NaHCO3 → NaNO3 + H2O + CO2
The coefficient for water in the balanced equation is 6.
If you're talking about a chemical equation for a situation where you have an environment containing only methane and propane, there can be no balanced equation because with no oxygen, neither gas will burn.
That's an easy one to balance as long as know the products. Magnesium carbonate decomposes into magnesium oxide and carbon dioxide. Here's the equation: MgCO3 --> MgO + CO2. The equation requires no coefficients to balance; it balances itself.