No there are situations where do excrete carbon dioxide. Conditions of low oxygen can force cells to rely solely upon anaerobic metabolism. The buildup in lactic acid during exercise is a consequence of this.
Carbon dioxide. To a lesser degree, depending on the conditions, the quite toxic carbon monoxide.Carbon dioxide. To a lesser degree, depending on the conditions, the quite toxic carbon monoxide.Carbon dioxide. To a lesser degree, depending on the conditions, the quite toxic carbon monoxide.Carbon dioxide. To a lesser degree, depending on the conditions, the quite toxic carbon monoxide.
Plants take in Carbon Dioxide and put out Oxygen until they die. When they rot, they create CO2.
Photosynthesis takes carbon dioxide and uses sunlight to split it into carbon and oxygen, releasing the oxygen into the air, and combining the carbon with water from the ground to create glucose.
because plants create oxygen from carbon dioxide in the air. they do this because they require the carbon to grow.
Many organic chemicals when combusted in oxygen can create Carbon dioxide and water
Carbon dioxide and oxygen are both gases under ordinary conditions. Carbon dioxide molecules consist of a single atom of carbon and two of oxygen. As a simplification, breathing animals inhale oxygen, use it to produce energy from carbon compounds that they eat and exhale carbon dioxide as a waste product.
you can make carbon dioxide every time you exhale or take one carbon atom and mix 2 oxygen atoms.
Most living animals inhale oxygen and exhale carbon dioxide plants try to compensate for that so they can live on earth by soaking up the carbon dioxide for photosynthesis and excreting oxygen therefore we are inhaling the carbon dioxide we create
Carbon dioxide is the product; oxygen and carbon are the reactants.
Carbon (C) can react with Oxygen (O) under different conditions to result in different products. 2C(s) + O2 (g)---------> 2CO (g) [CO is carbon monoxide gas] C(s) + O2 (g)-----------> CO2 (g) [CO2 is carbon dioxide gas] Hope it helped.
No. Carbon dioxide is a chemical compound of carbon and oxygen.
When carbon reacts with oxygen to form carbon dioxide, carbon dioxide is the product of the reaction.