Transpiration
Transpiration is a physical process where water in the soil is taken up by plants' roots, travels up the xylem, and evaporates out of the leaf. This process has no chemical equation, since it is not itself a chemical change.
The evaporation of the water, the state change from liquid water to water vapor, does have a chemical equation, which is: H2O(liquid) + energy -> H2O(gas)
The previous answer to this question gave the formula C6H12O6 + 6O2 -> 6CO2 + 6H20 + energy. That is the chemical formula for respiration, not for transpiration. Respiration is the process where sugars (like glucose - C6H12O6) are metabolized by a cell to provide energy.
starch+water+enzyme+carbon dioxide
Edited answer:
Transpiration is not a biochemical reaction, it is simply a physical event of evaporation of water along with gaseous exchange through the stomata or from free epidermal surface of tender plant parts. Therefore, question of equation does not arise.
Any equation; transpiration is the transfer of water from the body by skin followed by evaporation (if you think to body transpiration).
The process of leaves giving off water vapor is transpiration.
This phenomenon is called transpiration.
It is called transporation
Plants use transpiration to exchange gases. We studied transpiration in science.
Because there is no consistancy in the rate of transpiration
Transpiration
Evaporation of water through the plant's leaves is called transpiration.
This process is called transpiration.
This phenomenon is called transpiration.
osmosis or The Water Cycle: Transpiration- evaporation from the leaves of plants
The process of leaves giving off water vapor is transpiration.
transpiration
cuticular transpiration occurs through the cuticle while the stomatal transpiration occurs through the stomata.
This phenomenon is called transpiration.
It is called transporation
Transpiration. During the day, water is constantly evaporating from the plant, mainly through leaf stomata. The large amount of water lost from the plant is a result of the plant's need to obtain carbon dioxide from the air.
When water is released from leaves and evaporates it is called transpiration.