The equation is not correct because there are not the same number of each element on each side of the equation.
6CO2 + 6H2O ==> C6H12O6 + 6O2
No, the chemical equation is not balanced. The correct balanced equation is 2SO2 + O2 → 2SO3.
This is not an equation at all. An example of a correct (and balanced) equation would be: 2H2 + O2 --> 2 H2O
No, the equation is not balanced. The correct balanced equation would be: 2Na + F2 -> 2NaF
First off, you have the equation written wrong... those are Ls not Is. so it's Al2(CO3)3 + ZnCl2 = ZnCO3 + AlCl3 The balanced form of that equation is Al2(CO3)3 + 3 ZnCl2 = 3 ZnCO3 + 2 AlCl3 So the coefficients are 1,3,3,2
In a balanced chemical equation, the number of atoms of each element on both the reactant and product sides are equal, ensuring the law of conservation of mass is satisfied. This balance signifies that no atoms are created or destroyed during a chemical reaction, but instead rearranged.
The correct balanced formula for cesium oxide is Cs2O.
Balanced diet
A balanced chemical equation has correct placed coefficients and a representative chemical equation need these coefficients.
a balanced equation shows the correct proportion and mole/grams of the reactants involved....
Yes, that is correct.
The balanced equation is: 2KMnO4 + 3MgS -> K2S + 2Mg(MnO4)2
The correct balanced formula for aluminum chloride is AlCl3. This formula indicates that aluminum forms 1 ion and chlorine forms 3 ions to balance the charges.
This is not a correct question.
I would say that's correct.
This is not an equation at all. An example of a correct (and balanced) equation would be: 2H2 + O2 --> 2 H2O
The balanced equation is incorrect because the number of hydrogen atoms is not balanced. The correct balanced equation should be: Zn(s) + 2HCl(aq) -> ZnCl2(aq) + H2(g).
It is almost balanced, except for 2 moles of CO, so here it is:CO2 + C --> 2 CO