Some chemical equations don't have byproducts. The most obvious one is hydrogen and oxygen. React them and all you get is water.
In other equations, there are definitely byproducts...if you were crazy enough to react sodium hydroxide and hydrochloric acid (do this in a fume hood, please) you will get sodium chloride and water. The water would be the byproduct.
The new substance(s) formed during a chemical reaction will appear to the right of the "yield" arrow in an equation. This/these is/are the product(s) of the reaction.
it is a reaction
No, on the right of the arrow in a chemical reaction is called a product. The reactant is on the left.
Reactants
The general form is: "Reactants" ----> "Products" Therefore the right hand side of the equation are the products. Any catalysts, conditions, or reaction times may be listed over the arrow.
oxygen is the byproduct of photosynthesis because from water (H2O), sunlight and carbon dioxide (CO2) , they release oxygen to make glucose.
When hydrogen is burned in the presence of oxygen, it produces water as a byproduct. The chemical equation is 2H2 + O2 -> 2H2O.
The substance shown on the right side of a chemical equation is called the product. It is the result of a chemical reaction between the reactants on the left side of the equation.
A substance or molecule that forms in a chemical equation is a product. Products are the result of a chemical reaction between reactants, and they are found on the right side of a chemical equation.
Chemical equation
products
The symbol used in a chemical equation for a substance dissolved in water is "(aq)", which stands for "aqueous".
The new substance(s) formed during a chemical reaction will appear to the right of the "yield" arrow in an equation. This/these is/are the product(s) of the reaction.
it is a reaction
Products
(aq)
(aq)