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it gives us colour less form
glucose + 2NAD+ + 2ADP + 2P which when the reaction takes place the products are 2 pyruvate + 2NADH + 2ATP + 2H+
Yes, breaking down into glucose is a chemical change. A chemical change is any change in which the end result is a different substance from which you first started with. For example, the combining of two gases, hydrogen and oxygen, to make water, or of sodium and chlorine to make Sodium Chloride, salt.
Sodium hydrogen carbonate is baking powder.
Yes. Sodium hydrogen carbonate, more commonly called sodium bicarbonate, is a compound of sodium, hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen.
Sodium hydrogen sulphite: Sodium bisulfite, not sodium "meta" bisulfite
reaction betwen sodiumbisulphite and hydrogen peroxide
sodium thiosulphate
clear and colourless
anyone answer?
sodium and sulphur a think?? check a website or sumfin or ask albert einstein?? he'll no :)
Glucose is not made from sodium chloride.
They're all compounds.
As sodium sulfite (Na2SO4) dissolves, it dissociates into its ions: Na2SO4 --> 2Na+ + SO32-
Sodium sulphite is the IUPAC name. Its formula is Na2SO3 (NB there are only 3 oxygens in sulfite.
it gives us colour less form
Hi, KHSO4 is Potassium bisulfate.Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potassium_bisulfateThe answer above is totally wrong. Where did you leave the Hydrogen in the formula?The name of the ionic compound KHSO4 is Potassium Hydrogen Sulfate.Abdellatif Rochdi.