Yes water and carbon dioxide are both compounds and when they react together they form another compound.
Yes, water and carbon dioxide are considered inorganic compounds because they do not contain carbon-hydrogen bonds. Inorganic compounds typically do not involve organic molecules.
Yes, both carbon dioxide (CO2) and carbon monoxide (CO) are compounds that contain carbon and oxygen. Carbon dioxide is composed of one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms, while carbon monoxide is composed of one carbon atom and one oxygen atom.
Air is mostly a mixture of elements such as nitrogen, oxygen, and argon, but it also contains compounds like carbon dioxide and water vapor in smaller amounts. Overall, the composition of air is primarily elemental with some compounds present.
Carbonic acid, H2CO3, is probably the answer you want, but it's not the only thing. If you add carbon dioxide to fresh water (the salt in seawater seems to have a catalytic effect) most of it will remain as carbon dioxide and you'll get...carbonated water, a solution of CO2 in H2O. Both of those compounds are so stable it's hard to get them to react with anything.
Oxygen is found in literally millions of compounds, in both organic and inorganic chemistry.
Water and carbon dioxide are inorganic compounds.
Yes, water and carbon dioxide are considered inorganic compounds because they do not contain carbon-hydrogen bonds. Inorganic compounds typically do not involve organic molecules.
Soda water is made up of carbon dioxide gas dissolved in water. Neither of these substances is an element. They are both compounds. Carbon dioxide is the solute. Water is the solvent. Soda water is a solution.
Yes, both carbon dioxide (CO2) and carbon monoxide (CO) are compounds that contain carbon and oxygen. Carbon dioxide is composed of one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms, while carbon monoxide is composed of one carbon atom and one oxygen atom.
Air is mostly a mixture of elements such as nitrogen, oxygen, and argon, but it also contains compounds like carbon dioxide and water vapor in smaller amounts. Overall, the composition of air is primarily elemental with some compounds present.
that is the answer
Carbonic acid, H2CO3, is probably the answer you want, but it's not the only thing. If you add carbon dioxide to fresh water (the salt in seawater seems to have a catalytic effect) most of it will remain as carbon dioxide and you'll get...carbonated water, a solution of CO2 in H2O. Both of those compounds are so stable it's hard to get them to react with anything.
There is no single compound called carbon oxide. There are two oxides of carbon: carbon monoxide (CO) and carbon dioxide (CO2). Both are compounds.
Carbon itself is a non-metal and does not react with acids or bases. However, compounds containing carbon in various forms like organic compounds can react with both acids and bases. Carbon dioxide, produced when carbon-containing compounds are burned, can react with water to form carbonic acid, which is a weak acid.
Plants require both water and carbon dioxide to conduct photosynthesis. Sunlight energy is also required by plants to conduct photosynthesis.
both,assuming you mean water vapor and carbon dioxide.
I think what you're asking is, are the materials autotrophic eukaryotes (multicellular organisms that are able to produce their own glucose for energy), like most plants that use photosynthesis to produce glucose from carbon dioxide and water, considered inorganic compounds? sunlight H20+CO2---------> C6H12O6 + O2 the best answer I found was, "Organic compounds are actually compounds containing carbon covalently bonded with a hydrogen. You can say carbon is the main thing here. Compounds of carbon [except oxides, carbonates, bicarbonates] are termed as organic. Water does not contain a carbon atom. So it is inorganic. Carbon dioxide is considered by chemists as inorganic, along with carbon monoxide, carbonates and bicarbonates. Nature has not distinguished compounds into inorganic and organic compounds that clearly. These compounds of carbon are just assumed to be inorganic. Also there is that one thing about carbon being covalently bonded with hydrogen in organic compounds. Due to that criteria carbon dioxide is considered inorganic. But actually there is no clear reason."