When a metal burns, it typically reacts with oxygen in the air to form metal oxides, rather than carbon dioxide. However, if the metal is part of a compound that contains carbon, such as hydrocarbons or certain metal carbonates, burning it can produce carbon dioxide as a byproduct. In general, pure metals do not produce carbon dioxide when they burn.
Cs2 + 3 o2 → co2 + 2 so2
No. Metals do not contain carbon, so they cannot give off carbon dioxide.
Carbon form carbon dioxide by oxydation.
no metal can not react with acid to give Carbondioxide gas but a hydrogen gas HCl + Na-------->NaCl(s) + H(g)
No, when oxygen burns, it combines with other elements to form oxides, not carbon dioxide. For example, when oxygen burns hydrocarbons, it forms carbon dioxide and water.
Carbon is burned to carbon dioxide, a colorless gas.
All of them. At a high enough temperature, even diamond will burn, and produce (ridiculously expensive) carbon dioxide.
Cs2 + 3 o2 → co2 + 2 so2
This equation is 2 CO + O2 -> 2 CO2.
A hydrocarbon like methane, propane, or gasoline burns in the presence of oxygen to give off water vapor and carbon dioxide. This is a common chemical reaction that occurs during combustion.
No. Metals do not contain carbon, so they cannot give off carbon dioxide.
It depends on the fuel and how well it burns. For example, methane, ethane, propane, butane, petrol, ethanol, sugar, etc. will give water & carbon dioxide if burnt fully; however, imperfect burning can produce carbon monoxide or carbon. Burning hydrogen, on the other hand, produces water.
carbon dioxide and water
Carbon dioxide Example: All metal carbonates and hydrogencarbonates react with acids to give a corresponding salt, carbon dioxide and water.
I'd emagine the name would be ethane oxyde but i cant tell you the formula
Carbon dioxide, CO2