Just prepare some item of healthy food and you have before you edible carbon. You can't make atoms, unless you have some equipment in your basement lab that you really shouldn't have.
Oh. You might mean making a model of an atom. Maybe you could use red and white grapes and raisins and connect them with tooth picks. 6 red grapes as protons, 6 white grapes as neutrons, and 6 raisins as electrons. You might think of a better way to get the grapes to stay together.
Maybe you could use small marshmallows of 2 colors, or perhaps pieces of diced ham/beef and diced turkey.
To make an edible atom model, you can use various edible materials to represent the parts of an atom. For example, you can use different flavors of candy for protons, neutrons, and electrons, and arrange them to match the structure of the atom you are trying to represent. Be creative and have fun with it!
Carbon and oxygen : CO. Carbon monoxide is made of one carbon atom and one oxygen atom. Highly reactive within the human bloodstream.
Carbon, oxygen, and another oxygen atom make up carbon dioxide.
A carbon atom is made up of six neutrons and six electrons.
One carbon atom is an element. You must have two or more atoms to make a molecule.
Its all because of the electron dencity around the nucleus.when a carbon atom makes 3 bonds with another carbon atom there exists 1 sigma bond and 2 pi bonds,but it needs very high energy to have 1 sigma bond and 3 pi bonds that's why a carbon atom cannot make 4 bonds with another carbon atom.
Carbon is an atom.
You need one atom of carbon and two atoms of oxygen
carbon,hydrognand oxygen make up charcoal
One atom of carbon and two atoms of oxygen equal CO2 (carbon dioxide).
Carbon dioxide is composed of one carbon atom bonded to two oxygen atoms. The elements used to make carbon dioxide are carbon and oxygen.
When an oxygen atom is attached to a carbon atom, the carbon atom becomes more electronegative. This is because oxygen is more electronegative than carbon, causing it to attract electrons towards itself, making the carbon atom more electron-deficient.