Glucose is 180.16 g/mol. Doing stoichiometry, this means 1.97 grams is 0.0109 mol glucose. Because there are 6 mols of carbon per 1 mol of glucose, that means there are 0.0656 mols of carbon in this sample. One mole is equivalent to 6.023 x 1023 atoms, which leads to 3.95 x 1022 carbon atoms.
7.11 grams glucose (1 mole C6H12O6/180.156 grams)(6 mole C/1 mole C6H12O6)(6.022 X 10^23/1 mole C) = 1.43 X 10^23 atoms of carbon ------------------------------------------
glucose 1 mole has 180,156 grams and has 6.022 x 1023 atoms carbon 1 mole has 12,01 grams and has 6.022 x 1023 atoms. There are 6 carbon atoms in a glucose molecule so that times six would give you a total of 72,06 grams out of the 180,156. Carbon makes up about 40 percent of the total glucose mass so the final answer would be it would be around 2.4088 x 1023 atoms of carbon in one gram of glucose.
18 carbon atoms
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.
Each glucose molecule contains 6 carbon atoms. Thus we need 18 molecules of CO2 to make 3 molecules of glucose.
6 carbon atoms
7.11 grams glucose (1 mole C6H12O6/180.156 grams)(6 mole C/1 mole C6H12O6)(6.022 X 10^23/1 mole C) = 1.43 X 10^23 atoms of carbon ------------------------------------------
glucose 1 mole has 180,156 grams and has 6.022 x 1023 atoms carbon 1 mole has 12,01 grams and has 6.022 x 1023 atoms. There are 6 carbon atoms in a glucose molecule so that times six would give you a total of 72,06 grams out of the 180,156. Carbon makes up about 40 percent of the total glucose mass so the final answer would be it would be around 2.4088 x 1023 atoms of carbon in one gram of glucose.
19.86 x 1019 carbon atoms (just times it by 6, the number of carbon atoms in one glucose molecule)
Glucose (C6H12O6) is a monosaccharide that contains twelve hydrogen atoms, six carbon atoms and six oxygen atoms. A glucose and fructose molecule combine to create a sucrose molecule.
glucose is C6H12O6. So there are three types of atoms - carbon, hydrogen and oxygen
Glucose (C6H12O6) is a monosaccharide that contains twelve hydrogen atoms, six carbon atoms and six oxygen atoms. A glucose and fructose molecule combine to create a sucrose molecule.
The number of carbon atoms is 0,588.10e23.
12
6
6
18 carbon atoms