Answer:
The process of making S'more by adding chocolate bar, gram-crackers, and marshmallows in layers is not a chemical reaction
Explanation:
In a chemical reaction, the substances involved in the reaction are known as the reactants and the substances produced have different physical and chemical properties than those of the reactants and they are known as the products.
The bonds that hold the atoms of the reactants are broken down and rearranged, creating entirely new substances as products. Therefore, energy must be added and/or evolved in any chemical reaction and all reactant atoms should be involved in the reaction.
The change in energy can be sensed as heat change such as increase or decrease in the temperature of the products
Since S'more does not involve any of the above changes that occur in a chemical reaction when the chocolate bar, gram-crackers, and marshmallows are put together, it is not a chemical change or a chemical reaction.
Answer:
equal
Explanation:
According to the law of conservation of matter, the number of atoms before and after a chemical reaction should be equal, such that no atoms are, under normal circumstances, created or destroyed.
CH4 Methane which is the prototypical organic molecule and the others are chemical not sure about water
Answer:
Answer: approximately 60g of c6H12O6
Explanation:
We have the balanced equation (without state symbols):
6H2O+6CO2→C6H12O6+6O2
So, we would need six moles of carbon dioxide to fully produce one mole of glucose.
Here, we got
88g of carbon dioxide, and we need to convert it into moles.
Carbon dioxide has a molar mass of
44g/mol
. So here, there exist
There you go , This is my work i have did on that subject area