Carbon cannot be broken down. It is an element. When you burn carbon you get carbon dioxide, but that forms from combining carbon with oxygen.
When carbon bonds are broken, carbon dioxide gas is released.
when a material undergoes combustion, a sequence of exothermic reactions occur. The substance is broken down to form carbon dioxide and water. The carbon dioxide will be released as a gas as it is formed.
Alcohol is broken down mostly in the liver, where enzymes help convert it into gas (carbon dioxide) and water. Some smaller amount may be broken down in the stomach.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is released during the decomposition process as organic matter breaks down and is broken down by bacteria and fungi.
During photosynthesis, carbon dioxide and water are broken down and recombined into glucose. Only oxygen remains afterward, and as such is released through pores in the leaves.
During photosynthesis, carbon dioxide and water are broken down and recombined into glucose. Only oxygen remains afterward, and as such is released through pores in the leaves.
No. Carbonic acid is a compound of 3 elements: carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. It will, however, readily break down into water and carbon dioxide, which are compounds.
Acids produce carbon dioxide gas when they react with carbonates. This is due to the acid breaking down the carbonate to form carbon dioxide, water, and a salt.
During respiration, carbon dioxide gas is released as a byproduct of cellular metabolism. This occurs during the process of breaking down glucose to produce energy in the form of ATP. Carbon dioxide is then exhaled out of the body through the lungs when we breathe.
The main gas produced from the breakdown of glucose in the mitochondria is carbon dioxide (CO2). This occurs during a process called cellular respiration, where glucose is broken down to produce energy in the form of ATP. In addition to CO2, water (H2O) and heat are also produced.
It depends on the gas. If it's a pure gas--one with a single element, like oxygen or nitrogen--it's already as simple as it can get. If it's a mixture of gases, like air is, you could feed it into a gas liquification system and collect the individual pure gases as they condense. If it's a compound like carbon dioxide, you need to break it down into its elements and then you can separate it out. (But in the case of CO2, one of the elements is naturally a solid so you can just scrape it off the walls of the reactor.)
The primary gas produced during sugar digestion in animal cells is carbon dioxide (CO2). This occurs through the process of cellular respiration, where glucose is broken down to release energy, with CO2 being a byproduct that is then exhaled.