C6H12O6--------------------This one; glucose.
The energy in a sucrose molecule is stored in the interatomic bonds such as the carbon-oxygen bonds and the oxygen-hydrogen bonds.
carbon dioxide and water :)
No, as molecule go carbon dioxide is a small, simple molecule.
Carbon monoxide is CO and carbon dioxide is CO2.
C6H12O6--------------------This one; glucose.
The energy in a sucrose molecule is stored in the interatomic bonds such as the carbon-oxygen bonds and the oxygen-hydrogen bonds.
The energy in a sucrose molecule is stored in the interatomic bonds such as the carbon-oxygen bonds and the oxygen-hydrogen bonds.
carbon dioxide and water :)
The energy in a glucose molecule is stored in the bonds between the atoms.
Organic molecules have carbon while inorganic do not. An example of an organic molecule is that of proteins and carbohydrates. Inorganic examples are table salt and hydrochloric acid (stomach acid).
Carbohydrates.
Carbon is everywhere. Every energy molecule, fats, sugars, phospholipids, DNA, RNA, and every amino acid has it and therefore every protein. almost every molecule in you has carbon.
A molecule that contains hydrogen and carbon, but no other elements is a hydrocarbon molecule. An example of a hydrocarbon molecule is methane, with the formula CH4
Carbon dioxide < Carbohydrates < Fatty Acids (most reduced molecule).
No, it is a six-carbon molecule.
No, as molecule go carbon dioxide is a small, simple molecule.