No. Water is a chemical compound and a pure substance. Hydrocarbons are a large class of compounds which are composed of the elements hydrogen and carbon. Allotropes are forms of the same element with a different arrangement of atoms (example: graphite and diamond are both pure carbon.)
No water is not an allotrope and it can not have allotropes because it is not an element.
It is when you burn Oxygen. Here are equations. Hydrocarbon + Oxygen --> Carbon Dioxide + Water Hydrocarbon + Oxygen --> Carbon Monoxide + Water
It is when you burn Oxygen. Here are equations. Hydrocarbon + Oxygen --> Carbon Dioxide + Water Hydrocarbon + Oxygen --> Carbon Monoxide + Water
Generally, the hydrocarbon undergoes a combustion reaction, forming water and carbon dioxide. The water formed may be in the form of water vapour. But in the case where oxygen is limited, the hydrocarbon may under incomplete combustion, forming a gaseous mixture of water, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and hydrogen.A hydrocarbon reacting with oxygen means burning the hydrocarbon. When hydrocarbons are burned, the oxides of the compound elements, such as CO2,H2O are formed. If the hydrocarbon contain elements like Nitrogen, sulfur, etc oxides of them can be formed.
One example of a compound that does not contain hydrocarbon groups is water (H2O). Water is a simple compound made up of hydrogen and oxygen, with no hydrocarbon chains or rings present.
No water is not an allotrope and it can not have allotropes because it is not an element.
No, water and hydrogen peroxide are not allotropes. Allotropes are different forms of the same element with distinct chemical and physical properties, while water and hydrogen peroxide are two different compounds composed of different elements. Water is H2O, while hydrogen peroxide is H2O2.
It is when you burn Oxygen. Here are equations. Hydrocarbon + Oxygen --> Carbon Dioxide + Water Hydrocarbon + Oxygen --> Carbon Monoxide + Water
It is when you burn Oxygen. Here are equations. Hydrocarbon + Oxygen --> Carbon Dioxide + Water Hydrocarbon + Oxygen --> Carbon Monoxide + Water
The combustion of a hydrocarbon produces carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O) as byproducts. The chemical equation for the combustion of a hydrocarbon is typically hydrocarbon + oxygen -> carbon dioxide + water. Heat and light are often given off during this exothermic reaction.
Most hydrocarbons are less dense than water. So, if you put water on a hydrocarbon fire, they will simply float on top of it, rending the water ineffective.
Generally, the hydrocarbon undergoes a combustion reaction, forming water and carbon dioxide. The water formed may be in the form of water vapour. But in the case where oxygen is limited, the hydrocarbon may under incomplete combustion, forming a gaseous mixture of water, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide and hydrogen.A hydrocarbon reacting with oxygen means burning the hydrocarbon. When hydrocarbons are burned, the oxides of the compound elements, such as CO2,H2O are formed. If the hydrocarbon contain elements like Nitrogen, sulfur, etc oxides of them can be formed.
water oil
it is fuel + air= water + carbon dioxide + nitrogen + heat, at least according to wikipedia
Saturated hydrocarbon does not decolourise bromine water while unsaturated hydrocarbon decolourize it.
The complete combustion of a hydrocarbon would give carbon dioxide and water as the only products.
The complete combustion of a hydrocarbon would give carbon dioxide and water as the only products.