12
To create three glucose molecules, it would require a total of 72 carbon atoms because each glucose molecule contains 6 carbon atoms. So, 6 carbon atoms x 3 glucose molecules = 18 carbon atoms for each individual glucose molecule, and 18 carbon atoms x 3 = 72 carbon atoms in total.
19.86 x 1019 carbon atoms (just times it by 6, the number of carbon atoms in one glucose molecule)
The formula for glucose is C6H12O6. This means that six carbon atoms can be found within one molecule of glucose, as well as twelve hydrogens and six oxygens. In, for example, photosynthesis, carbon dioxide is involved in a complex series of reactions that form glucose from those molecules, as well as from hydrogen atoms from water. If 54 molecules of carbon dioxide, and thus 54 atoms of carbon, were used in photosynthesis, nine molecules of glucose would be formed, thus meaning that all of the carbon atoms would become glucose. Therefore, all of the carbon atoms can potentially become part of glucose.
18 carbon atoms (6 in each)
A molecule of glucose has 6 atoms of carbon, 12 atoms of hydrogen, and 6 atoms of oxygen. Therefore, to build four molecules of glucose, you would need 48 atoms of hydrogen (12 atoms of hydrogen per molecule of glucose multiplied by 4 molecules).
So many. Ex-Glucose,Sucrose,Fructose,Manose
Many molecules contain carbon atoms, but a common pair includes carbon dioxide (CO₂) and glucose (C₆H₁₂O₆). Carbon dioxide consists of one carbon atom bonded to two oxygen atoms, while glucose is a simple sugar composed of six carbon atoms along with hydrogen and oxygen. Both molecules are essential in biological and environmental processes.
Six CO2 molecules will be produced for every glucose molecule completely oxidized. Glucose contains six Carbon atoms, hence the six CO2 molecules.
Each glucose molecule contains 6 carbon atoms. Thus we need 18 molecules of CO2 to make 3 molecules of glucose.
In the chemical formula 3C6H12O6, there are 3 molecules of glucose (C6H12O6). Each glucose molecule contains 6 carbon atoms. Therefore, the total number of carbon atoms in 3C6H12O6 is 3 x 6 = 18 carbon 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.
2 molecules of ethanol and 2 molecules of carbon dioxide