Mg(s) + 3/2 O2(g) + C(s) ----> MgCO3(s)
2Mg + CO2 --> 2MgO + C
mg + cl= mgcl2
It is balanced.
6
No, the balanced equation is 6Ca + 3O2 ---> 6CaO. The product, calcium oxide, is CaO and not CaO2.
2koh+co2--k2co3+h2o
The balanced equation is 2 C4H10 + 13 O2 -> 8 CO2 + 10 H2O.
Mg + 2HCl ------> MgCl2 + H2
Li2CO3 = Li2O + CO2
CO2 + C --------> 2CO
The balanced equation is: CH4 + 2 O2 → CO2 + 2 H2O
It is balanced.
MAGNESIUM OXIDE + CARBON DIOXIDE Mg + CO2
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.
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.
What information can you determine from the coefficients in this balanced chemical equation? Mg + 2HCl → MgCl2 + H2
Here is an example of a Competition Reaction: Mg+HCL=Mg+H2 This equation is not balanced.
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.