False. It depends on oxygen.
No. It is neither organic nor a molecule. Silicon dioxide consists only of silicon and oxygen. By definition, an organic compound must contain carbon. Second, silicon dioxide forms a covalent network rather than molecules.
Depends on the rocks which formed sand: silicon dioxide, calcium carbonate, volcanic minerals.
Well, trees don't really store carbon dioxide; they use the carbon dioxide directly to produce sugars during the Calvin cycle. When decomposers eat up those sugars, they release the carbon in the sugars in the form of carbon dioxide.
carbon dioxide
Silicon dioxide, or SiO2
Yes. Two carbon dioxide molecules for each molecule of glucose entering glycolysis.
When an organic molecule such as methane or ethanol undergoes complete combustion (in the presence of oxygen) it produces Carbon dioxide and water.
glycolysis
Carbon Dioxide
glucose
No, as molecule go carbon dioxide is a small, simple molecule.
The similarity of sulfur molecule and the sulfur dioxide molecule is the type of bond.
Yes, and so it water.
Carbon dioxide
No. Because of it's symmetry carbon dioxide is nonpolar.FalseLove, Nessa
It takes one molecule of carbon dioxide to make one molecule of carbon dioxide.
The first stage is called "glycolysis.""Glyco" meaning "sugar.""Lysis" meaning "to split."