c6+h6+o2=co2+h2o in acidic medium balance by oxidation method

I'm tired of deleting your duplicate posts -- three within a few minutes.

Please do not post this question again.

To balance the given equation, c6+h6+o2=co2+h2o in an acidic medium using the oxidation method, follow these steps:

Step 1: Identify the atoms that are undergoing oxidation and reduction.
In this equation, the carbon atoms are being oxidized from an oxidation state of 0 in C6 to +4 in CO2. The hydrogen atoms are being reduced from an oxidation state of 0 in H6 to +1 in H2O.

Step 2: Write and balance the half-reactions for oxidation and reduction separately.

Oxidation half-reaction: C6 → 6CO2

Reduction half-reaction: H6 → 3H2O

Step 3: Balance atoms other than oxygen and hydrogen.

In the oxidation half-reaction, since there is only carbon, it is already balanced.

In the reduction half-reaction, there are 6 hydrogen atoms on the left side and 6 hydrogen atoms on the right side. Therefore, it is already balanced.

Step 4: Balance oxygen atoms by adding water molecules.

In the oxidation half-reaction, there are 6 oxygen atoms on the right side, so we need 6 water molecules on the left side to balance it.

C6 → 6CO2 + 6H2O

In the reduction half-reaction, there are 6 oxygen atoms on the left side, so we need 3 water molecules on the right side to balance it.

H6 + 3H2O → 3H2O

Step 5: Balance the charges by adding electrons.

In the oxidation half-reaction, each carbon atom loses 8 electrons. As there are 6 carbon atoms, a total of 48 electrons are lost.

C6 → 6CO2 + 6H2O + 48e^-

In the reduction half-reaction, there is no charge on either side. Therefore, no electrons are needed.

H6 + 3H2O → 3H2O

Step 6: Balance the number of electrons transferred in both half-reactions.

To balance the number of electrons, we need to multiply the reduction half-reaction by 48.

48H6 + 144H2O → 144H2O

Now, the equation becomes:

C6 + 6H6 + O2 → 6CO2 + 6H2O + 48e-
48H6 + 144H2O → 144H2O

Step 7: Combine the balanced half-reactions.

To combine the two half-reactions, you need to ensure that the number of electrons lost in the oxidation half-reaction (48e-) is equal to the number of electrons gained in the reduction half-reaction (48e-).

Multiply the oxidation half-reaction by 48:

48C6 + 288H6 + 48O2 → 288CO2 + 288H2O + 48e-
48H6 + 144H2O → 144H2O

Now you can cancel out the electrons:

48C6 + 288H6 + 48O2 → 288CO2 + 288H2O

Finally, simplify the equation:

C6H6 + O2 → CO2 + H2O