24 in total.
there are six carbon, twelve hydrogen and six oxygen atoms.
Glucose has 6 carbon atoms, 12 hydrogen atoms and 6 oxygen atoms.
6 Carbon, 12 Hydrogen, and 6 Oxygen. (24 in all)
1 molecule C6H12O6 = 6 atoms O, so : 36.00*1023 atoms O
The actual chemical formula isn't different - both are C6H12O6. The only reason glucose and fructose are different is because the atoms are arranged differently. View the Related Links below to see the molecular arrangements of Fructose and Glucose.
C6H12O6. 6 atoms of carbon, 12 atoms of hydrogen, 6 atoms of oxygen.
It depends what type of sugar you mean... glucose is C6H12O6. All sugars contain arrangements of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen.
(5.72g c6h12o6)*6.022*10^23atoms c6h12o6/180.156gc6h12o6=1.91*10^22 atoms c6h12o6
18 grams C6H12O6 (1 mole C6H12O6/180.156 grams)(6.022 X 10^23/1 mole C6H12O6) = 6.02 X 10^22 atoms
The number of atoms is 2,167 970 708 52.10e25.
6 carbon atoms.12 hydrogen atoms.6 oxygen atoms---------------------------------add= 24 total atoms============
The answer is 24
24 atoms in total
6 Carbon, 12 Hydrogen, and 6 Oxygen. (24 in all)
One molecule of C6H12O6 has 6 carbon atoms, 12 hydrogen atoms, and 6 oxygen atoms.
1 molecule C6H12O6 = 6 atoms O, so : 36.00*1023 atoms O
The best way of doing this is by invoking the concept of moles and avagadro's number. Avagadros number is 6.022*10^23. One mole is an avagadro's number of atoms. So to solve this problem a periodic table can be used to find the molar mass (the mass of one mole) of C6H12O6. This comes out to be: (6*12.01)+(12*1)+(6*16)=180.06 g/mole.Then we use dimensional analysis to find the number of C, H, and O atoms:Carbon atoms:3.00g*(1 mole C6H12O6/180.06g)*(6 mole C/1 mole C6H12O6)*(6.022*10^23 atoms /mole C)=6.02*10^22 atoms of carbonHydrogen atoms:3.00g*(1 mole C6H12O6/180.06g)*(12 mole H/1 mole C6H12O6)*(6.022*10^23 atoms /mole H)=1.20*10^23 atoms of hydrogenOxygen atoms:3.00g*(1 mole C6H12O6/180.06g)*(6 mole H/1 mole C6H12O6)*(6.022*10^23 atoms /mole H)=6.02*10^22 atoms of oxygen
The actual chemical formula isn't different - both are C6H12O6. The only reason glucose and fructose are different is because the atoms are arranged differently. View the Related Links below to see the molecular arrangements of Fructose and Glucose.
24