Respiration of sugar
Life on earth is carbon based, and since matter is neither created nor destroyed in ordinary chemical reactions, combustion of sugar also produces carbon dioxide and water as does the burning of wood, gasoline, fuel oil, and most other natural substances. The atoms in these substances are not destroyed but rather rearranged.
Unfortunately, combustion is not always efficient and so you often get other noxious substances which are why you always make sure to have good ventilation when burning.
Combustion of ethene produces carbon dioxide and water.
Yes. Aerobic respiration produces carbon dioxide and water. Also, oxygen is the terminal electron acceptor
No, burning hydrogen produces only water, it does not produce carbon or carbon dioxide.
Complete combustion produces carbon dioxide. Incomplete combustion produces carbon monoxide.
No, cellular respiration, the central process of our metabolism, produces carbon dioxide and water.
Photosynthesis is the process that produces water, carbon dioxide and energy.
Combustion of ethene produces carbon dioxide and water.
It produces sugar with the help of sunlight water and carbon dioxide . It produces sugar with the help of sunlight water and carbon dioxide .
When dissolved in water it produces carbon dioxide
Respiration
No, the process is to take in carbon dioxide with water and sunlight to make sugars; the by-product is oxygen.
WATER! H2O it is a combustion reaction and every combustion reaction produces carbon dioxide and water
it is the nuclei
Burning methane produces carbon dioxide and water vapor, but not nitrogen. This is because methane is composed of carbon and hydrogen, whose oxides are carbon dioxide and water respectively.
petrol consists of carbon and hydrogen, when it burns it produces carbon dioxide and water if complete combustion occurs
Yes. Aerobic respiration produces carbon dioxide and water. Also, oxygen is the terminal electron acceptor
The amount of carbon dioxide a person produces