No.
carbon dioxide
O=C=O is the structure of Carbon Dioxide - planar and linear.
16 is the total number of electrons shown in the Lewis Structure of Carbon Dioxide.
16 is the total number of electrons shown in the Lewis Structure of Carbon Dioxide.
The carbon dioxide has two double bonds each with its oxygen atoms. The structure would be O=C=O and is a linear molecule.
the lungs
Yes
The stoma.
stomata
To get rid of a fire you need to break the fire tetrahedron. There are ways of doing this. Carbon dioxide could get rid of all the oxygen in the fire. If there wasn't any oxygen, there would be no fire and the fire would be extinguished.
No, breaking up a carbon dioxide molecule into its constituent atoms (carbon and oxygen) would result in separate carbon and oxygen atoms. The molecular structure and properties of carbon dioxide would no longer exist.
The structure in the lungs responsible for exchanging oxygen and carbon dioxide between the blood and the air is called the alveoli.