C6H5CH=CH2:
chemical formula: C8H8
Assuming no involvement of nitrogen:
C8H8 + 10 O2 -> 8 CO2 + 4 H2O
The balanced chemical equation for the reaction of sulfur dioxide with water is: SO2 + H2O → H2SO3
If a chemical equation is not balanced, it violates the Law of Conservation of Mass. This law states that matter cannot be created or destroyed in a chemical reaction, so the number of atoms of each element must be the same on both sides of a balanced chemical equation.
The balanced chemical equation for burning C18H38 in air is: 2C18H38 + 55O2 → 36CO2 + 38H2O
The term hydrocarbon does not refer to one specific chemical, rather, it refers to a large number of different chemicals which are made out of the elements hydrogen and carbon (methane, propane, octane, acetylene, benzene, etc., are all hydrocarbons). In order to write a balanced chemical equation, we would have to know specifically which hydrocarbon was part of the reaction.
C2H5OH +3O2 gives 2CO2 +3H2O ...it burns with ablue flame in air
The balanced equation for dimethylether (C2H6O) combusted in air is: 2 C2H6O + 5 O2 -> 4 CO2 + 6 H2O
A balanced chemical equation has correct placed coefficients and a representative chemical equation need these coefficients.
Balanced Chemical equation
C6H12O6 + 6 O2 = 6 CO2 + 6 H2OThis is the correctly balanced equation for the combustion of Fructose. Physical states depend on how its being combusted so I left them off.
Proteins have a very complicate chemical formula but not a "balanced chemical equation".
A balanced chemical equation.
The general chemical equation for the complete combustion of a hydrocarbon is: Hydrocarbon + O2 -> CO2 + H2O For example, the combustion of methane (CH4) can be represented as: CH4 + 2O2 -> CO2 + 2H2O
The balanced chemical equation for potassium chloride is 2KCl = 2K + Cl2.
The balanced symbol equation for the complete combustion of a hydrocarbon fuel like octane (C8H18) is: C8H18 + 12.5O2 -> 8CO2 + 9H2O
No, the chemical equation is not balanced. The correct balanced equation is 2SO2 + O2 → 2SO3.
The balanced chemical equation for copper sulfate is: CuSO4 + H2O → CuSO4•5H2O
The balanced decomposition chemical equation for hexane (C6H14) is: 2C6H14 → 6C + 7H2