Any living plant takes in Co2 but stagnant water generally gives off Co2
no
CO2
The rectants in photosynthesis are CO2,water and sun
There are two mainly. They are CO2 and water
Carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O) can react to form an equilibrium state between these reactants and their product of carbonic acid (H2CO3). The simple reaction is H2O + CO2 <---> H2CO3.
no
Plants use CO2 to generate energy (from glucose) 6CO2 + 6H20 -> C6H12O6 + 6O2 carbon dioxide + water -> glucose + oxygen
It produces glucose .
I'm assuming you're talking about the absorption of CO2 into water. CO2 free water is used to properly measure the amount of CO2 water can actually absorb. CO2 already in the water will reduce the mass of CO2 transferred from the gas, and while I don't believe that there is a specific point at which CO2 can no longer be absorbed by water, the tendency for CO2 to be absorbed into water with CO2 already in it is reduced.
CO2
CO2 dissolves into the water the same as oxygen.
The rectants in photosynthesis are CO2,water and sun
Yes, wind power can generate electricity. Wind energy is considered to be an important contributor of renewable energy having no emissions of CO2.
Solubility of CO2 in water decreases with temperature, so as temperature is increased, the concentration of CO2 decreases.
No…Co2 is carbon dioxide, what you exhale.
There are two mainly. They are CO2 and water
Freshly prepared lime water is used in the evperiment to test the presence of CO2 in water because lime water turns milky when CO2 is present in water.