Haemoglobin.
Carbon Dioxide, or CO2, has one Carbon molecule and two Oxygen molecules.
It is to carry oxygen from the lungs to tissue around the body.
Carbon, oxygen, and another oxygen atom make up carbon dioxide.
Red Blood Cells (Erythrocytes) are responsible for carrying oxygen (or carbon dioxide) around the body.
No. One carbon dioxide molecule is made up of one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms.
In a carbon dioxide molecule, carbon does not take electrons from oxygen. Instead, carbon shares electrons with oxygen through covalent bonds, forming a stable molecule.
Caron dioxide is a chemical compound of the elements carbon and oxygen. Carbon dioxide is made from one carbon molecule and two oxygen molecules and is commonly written as CO2.
They are both made out of molecules: Carbon dioxide = CO2-molecules, Oxygen = O2-molecules.
Carbon Dioxide (two oxygen molecules and one carbon molecule)
No, carbon dioxide is not the same as oxygen (O2). Carbon dioxide is a molecule composed of one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms (CO2). Oxygen, on the other hand, exists as O2, where two oxygen atoms are bonded together.
Not in it, but bonded to it. In this case, you have carbon monoxide. Add another oxygen molecule and you have carbon dioxide. No, a molecule of Oygen would have the formula O2, and it contains two atoms of Oygen. If Carbon was also present then it would not be a molecule of Oxygen. It would be either Carbon monoxide (CO) or Carbon dioxide (CO2).
Carbon dioxide is denser than oxygen because it has a larger molecular weight per molecule. Each molecule of carbon dioxide (CO2) consists of one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms, making it heavier than each molecule of oxygen (O2), which consists of only two oxygen atoms. This difference in molecular weight causes carbon dioxide to be denser than oxygen.