2nh4no3 ---> 2n2 + o2 + 4h2o
No, it's not balanced because the number of hydrogens and nitrogens on the left is not equal to the number on the right. 3H2 + N2 --> 2NH3
Mn is for manganese I think. Ok first of all check the number of molecules on each side. on the left, Mn has 1, Oxygen has 2, Nitrogen has 1, Hydrogen has 4. On the right hand, Mn has 2,Oxygen has 3, nitrogen has 1 and Hydrogen has 5. all need to be balanced.So the resulting coefficients on both sides should be;2(MnO2) + 2(NH4) --- > Mn2O3 + 2(NH3) + H2O
First make the reaction equation balanced for N-atoms (co-existant in both formula)N2O5 + H2O --> 2 HNO3So 1.02 mole HNO3 is produced from:1.02 x 1 (N per HNO3) / 2 (N per N2O5) = 0.51 mol N2O5
Well 6Na + N2 > 2Na3N
NO
The balanced equation for the decomposition of ammonium nitrite (NH4NO2) into nitrogen gas (N2) and water (H2O) is: 2NH4NO2(s) → N2(g) + 2H2O(l)
This equation is:NH4NO2 = N2 + 2 H2O
NH4NO2(s) --Δ--> 2 H2O(l) + N2(g)
Four ammonia plus five oxygen molecules yields 4 nitrous oxide plus six water.
The balanced equation would be 2N2H4 + N2O4 = 3N2 +4H2O
2NH4NO3->2N2+O2+4H2O
The balanced equation for this reaction is: 3H2 + N2 -> 2NH3
The formula for heating ammonia is: NH4OH yields NH3 + H2O
H2O, CO2, N2, O2, C6H11O6 H2O, CO2, N2, O2, C6H11O6
The balanced reaction for N2H4 + H2O2 --> N2 + H2O is N2H4 + 2H2O2 --> N2 + 4H2O
H2O (water), CO2 (carbon dioxide) and N2 (nitrogen) are chemical compounds. O2 (oxygen) is a diatomic molecule, not a compound.
The balanced equation for the reaction is: N2H4 + H2O2 -> N2 + H2O The coefficients for the balanced equation are: 1 N2H4 + 1 H2O2 -> 1 N2 + 2 H2O