Glucose
Glucose and oxygen
Yes,the reactants are CO2 and H2O.End products are Glucose and Oxygen.
They are raw materials for respiration.Glucose is burned and ATP is produced.
It serves as a reactant that combines with sunlight and water, which makes food (glucose) for the plant, and oxygen.
An example of a chemical change where the starting material is used up is the combustion of a piece of paper. When paper is burned, it undergoes a chemical reaction with oxygen in the air, resulting in the production of carbon dioxide, water vapor, and ash. Once all the paper has been completely burned, it is consumed and no longer present.
A limiting reactant is one whose supply limits the amount or speed of a reaction. Conversely, the non limiting one is in good enough supply so that increasing its concentration has no effect on the outcome. An example could be respiration. If there's plenty of oxygen, but not much glucose available, then oxygen is the non limiting reactant. On the other hand, if there's plenty of glucose, then the rate of respiration is limited by how quickly the cell can be supplied with oxygen.
The limiting reactant is oxygen.
Oxygen
Glucose and oxygen
It is oxygen.
Aluminium (Al) + Oxygen (O) = Aluminium Oxide (Al2O3)Aluminium Atomic weight = about 27Oxygen Atomic weight = about) 16Proportion in Al203 = Aluminium 54, Oxygen 48Thus the ratio of weight in Al2O3 is 54/48 = 1.125And the ratio present as reactants is 5.433/8.834 = 0.615Thus the Aluminium will run out before the Oxygen as the reaction proceeds, making the Aluminium the limiting reactant.
Glucose is oxidized into CO2. Oxygen is reduced into Water
oxygen
6co2 + c6 h12 o6 oxygen - glucose
glucose and oxygen are the reactants of cellular respiration
There is no limiting reactant in that equation, it's balanced. Four hydrogens on the left, 4 on the right, 2 oxygens on the left, 2 oxygens on the right. If it was 3H2 then it would be oxygen.
Oxygen