No, to my best knowledge this can not be done. Carbon is an element (C), phosphate is an 'oxy-acid salt anion' (PO43-)
3 carbon atoms in a triose phosphate molecule
The phosphate is attached to the 5' carbon of the sugar in a nucleotide.
carbon is very expensive.and its replaced by silicon. and its cheaper
NO
Yes, because it does not contain carbon.
This compound doesn't exist.
the sides of a double helix are composed of a chain alternating between a phosphate and a deoxyribose (5 carbon) sugar.
A nucleotide is composed of three basic components: a phosphate group, a five-carbon sugar (either deoxyribose or ribose), and a nitrogenous base (either adenine, guanine, cytosine, or thymine/uracil).
5 carbon sugar, phosphate group, nitrogenous base
The components are a nitrogenous base, a five-carbon sugar, and a phosphate. The nitrogen compound is called a nucleobaseand combines with the sugar to form the nucleoside, and the phosphate binds to the carbon in the sugar.
A nucleotide is made of a phosphate, a sugar and a nitrogenous base. In RNA the sugar is ribose and in DNA it is deoxyribose. The bases in DNA are A, T, G and C. The T is replaced by U in RNA.
There are three carbon atoms in each molecule of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate (G3P).