Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen.
The general formula is Cn(H2O)n
"element" (2 make up a molecule)
A molecule of sugar typically has 12 carbon atoms, 22 hydrogen atoms, and 11 oxygen atoms.
The formula for a sugar is generally CnH2nOn for a monosaccharide. Whatever the sugar, it needs to contain carbon, hydrogen and oxygen
No, a monosaccharide is not an element. It is a simple sugar molecule made up of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms.
One carbon atom is an element. You must have two or more atoms to make a molecule.
A molecule is made up of atoms that make different formulas. Each atom is a different element, so a group of different atoms will form a type of molecule, like a sugar molecule. A molecular formula would be the formula of the molecule's atoms. Like sugar= C6, (Carbon 6 Atoms) H12, (Hydrogen 12) O6. (Oxygen 6) C6H12O6 A molecule is made up of electrons and protons.
Nothing. A molecule is a pure substance if it is of one element.
Gold is an element, not a compound or molecule. It is a pure substance made up of only gold atoms.
Neither sugar (table) nor water are elements but are compounds. Mixing them produces a solution of sugar in water.
No, sugar is not an element. To be an element, a substance must have all the same type of atom. A common sugar is Glucose, which has three atoms in it: 1 Carbon, 1 Hydrogen and 1 Oxygen in the arrangement C6H12O6 . This means that in one molecule of Glucose, there are 24 atoms. So, as sugar [Glucose] has many different types of atom in it, it's not an element.
silocon and calcium
Any simple sugar is not an element but a bonded collection of many individual elements, also known as a molecule. There is no right answer to this misguide question.