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There are eleven oxygen atoms in a molecule of table sugar C12H22O11.
One molecule of table sugar (sucrose) contains 11 oxygen atoms.
There are 11 oxygen atoms in a molecule of table sugar.
If you're asking for the number of atoms, it would be 45. Chemical Formula: C12H22O11
One molecule of table sugar (sucrose) contains 45 atoms: 12 atoms of carbon, 22 atoms of hydrogen, and 11 atoms of oxygen.
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12 atoms of carbon, 22 atoms of hydrogen, and 11 atoms of oxygen. It is sucrose, or table sugar.
I know that table salt has no hydrogen atoms; NaCl2
Table sugar has the chemical name and formula of sucrose (C12H22O11). For every one mole of sucrose, 12 moles of carbon are contained. In order to calculate moles you take 12 multiplied by Avogadro's number of 6.0221413 x 10^23. That would equal 7.2x10^24 atoms of carbon per molecule of sucrose.