Sugar
Glucose is a carbohydrate, which means it contains carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. Specifically, glucose contains 6 carbon, 6 oxygen, and 12 hydrogen atoms.
A molecule is said to be organic if it contains carbon atoms covalently bonded to hydrogen atoms. Organic molecules can also contain other elements like oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, and phosphorus, as long as they are predominantly composed of carbon and hydrogen atoms.
Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen
a protein contains carbon hydrogen oxygen nitrogen and sulfur.
hydrogen, carbon, oxygen
Protein is the molecule that contains carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen and is used by the body for growth and repair. It is composed of amino acids that are essential for building and repairing tissues in the body.
The chemical formula of ethanol is C2H5OH; ethanol contain carbon, oxygen and hydrogen.
12 atoms of carbon, 22 atoms of hydrogen, and 11 atoms of oxygen. It is sucrose, or table sugar.
5 molecules of carbon dioxide will contain 5 carbon atoms (1 per molecule) and no hydrogen atoms as carbon dioxide contains only carbon and oxygen. The 5 molecules will contain a total of 10 oxygen atoms (2 per molecule).
The percentage of carbon in glucose is 40 %.
An organic molecule, such as a hydrocarbon, is a type of molecule that contains mostly carbon and hydrogen with a small amount of oxygen. These molecules are essential building blocks in biological systems and can be found in a wide variety of compounds, including fats, oils, and sugars.
Table sugar - sucrose - contains 12 carbon atoms, 22 hydrogen atoms, and 11 oxygen atoms per molecule. Other sugars have different formulae.