1 molecule C6H12O6 = 6 atoms O, so : 36.00*1023 atoms O
0.2 moles C6H12O6 x 6.02x10^23 molecules/mole = 1.2x10^23 molecules of C6H12)61.2x10^23 molecules C6H12O6 x 6 molecules "O"/molecule C6H12O6 = 7.2x19^23 molecules "O"
A molecule of fructose contains 6 carbon atoms, 6 oxygen atoms, and 12 hydrogen atoms.
Twelve. Glucose is C6H12O6, so two molecules of glucose would give you: 12 carbon atoms 24 hydrogen atoms 12 oxygen atoms The 12 molecules of oxygen would give 24 oxygen atoms, for 48 total atoms of oxygen. So...each carbon atom would take two oxygen atoms to give 12 molecules of carbon dioxide, and each remaining oxygen atom would take two hydrogen atoms to give 12 molecules of water.
That varies with the substance. H2O is composed of 3 atoms. C6H12O6 is composed of 24 atoms.
The molecular formula of glucose is C6H12O6. 1 mole glucose = 6.022 x 1023 molecules. 1 molecule glucose = 24 atoms 1mole glucose x 6.022 x 1023 molecules/mole x 24 atoms/molecule = 1 x 1025 atoms (rounded to 1 significant figure)
24. C6H12O6
24 atoms in total
24
24
0.2 moles C6H12O6 x 6.02x10^23 molecules/mole = 1.2x10^23 molecules of C6H12)61.2x10^23 molecules C6H12O6 x 6 molecules "O"/molecule C6H12O6 = 7.2x19^23 molecules "O"
One molecule of C6H12O6 has 6 carbon atoms, 12 hydrogen atoms, and 6 oxygen atoms.
Carbohydrate molecules are compounds of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms in various proportions.
C6H12O6 Glucose has twelve hydrogen atoms
glucose is C6H12O6.
A molecule of fructose contains 6 carbon atoms, 6 oxygen atoms, and 12 hydrogen atoms.
Twelve. Glucose is C6H12O6, so two molecules of glucose would give you: 12 carbon atoms 24 hydrogen atoms 12 oxygen atoms The 12 molecules of oxygen would give 24 oxygen atoms, for 48 total atoms of oxygen. So...each carbon atom would take two oxygen atoms to give 12 molecules of carbon dioxide, and each remaining oxygen atom would take two hydrogen atoms to give 12 molecules of water.
That varies with the substance. H2O is composed of 3 atoms. C6H12O6 is composed of 24 atoms.