11 grams because all is reacted and there is no reactant left over, although if there were only 3 grams of carbon there would have to be 6 grams of oxygen for this to be viable as carbon dioxide is CO2 so the question asked was itself wrong.
Technically, carbon is not produced when something is burned. Carbon dioxide is produced. And only if the substance being burned contains carbon compounds. Burning separates the carbon from the other elements in the compound and combines it with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide.
The equation for the formation of carbon dioxide from carbon and oxygen is C + O2 -> CO2 . Therefore, one mole of carbon dioxide can be formed from each mole of diatomic oxygen. To the justified number of significant digits, the gram molecular mass of diatomic oxygen is 32. Therefore 54/32 or 1.69 moles of carbon dioxide can be produced. (The last digit is smaller than the others to show that it may not be accurate within 1 digit.)
Carbon dioxide is a compound consisting of carbon and oxygen.
When fossil fuels burn, oxygen is used as the gas that reacts with the carbon in the fuel to produce carbon dioxide. This process is known as combustion and is the reason why carbon dioxide is released as a byproduct of burning fossil fuels.
Yes, when carbon burns in limited oxygen, it can produce carbon monoxide. This is because there is not enough oxygen present to form carbon dioxide, so carbon monoxide is formed instead.
No, carbon dioxide cannot be turned into oxygen. Carbon dioxide is a byproduct of respiration and oxygen is produced during photosynthesis.
24.0 g of carbon reacts with 64.0 g of oxygen to form 88 g of carbon dioxide.
carbon dioxide is produced.
The balanced chemical equation for the reaction of pure carbon (C) with oxygen gas (O2) to form carbon dioxide (CO2) is: 2C + O2 -> 2CO2
When oxygen is produced more than carbon dioxide, it leads to an increase in oxygen levels in the atmosphere. This can occur during processes like photosynthesis in plants, which convert carbon dioxide into oxygen. The excess oxygen can benefit organisms that rely on it for respiration.
The gas taken in by photosynthesis is carbon dioxide (CO2), while the gas produced is oxygen (O2).
Carbon dioxide is produced when carbon monoxide and oxygen combine. This reaction is often observed in combustion processes, where incomplete combustion of carbon-containing compounds results in the formation of carbon monoxide which then reacts with oxygen to form carbon dioxide.
This is the law om mass conservation.
This is the law om mass conservation.
Negative carbon dioxide emission is the opposite of carbon dioxide. The formula for carbon dioxide is CO2.
Carbon dioxide is produced as a byproduct of cellular respiration in organisms, including humans and animals. During respiration, glucose is broken down in the presence of oxygen to produce energy, water, and carbon dioxide.
Oxygen gas is produced. Carbon dioxide is utilized