One atom of carbon and two atoms of oxygen make up CO2.
Carbon dioxide is a compound; therefore, its smallest unit is a molecule.
No, carbon dioxide is not a macromolecule. Macromolecules are large molecules made up of smaller subunits linked together, while carbon dioxide is a small molecule composed of one carbon atom and two oxygen atoms.
No, carbon dioxide is not present in copper sulfate. Copper sulfate is composed of copper, sulfur, and oxygen atoms, not carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is a molecule composed of carbon and oxygen atoms.
Carbon dioxide is a covalent compound. It is composed of one carbon atom bonded covalently to two oxygen atoms.
CO2 =One carbon atom and two Oxygen atoms in every molecule.
Carbon dioxide is a molecule, not an atom.
It is sort of tricky question. One molecule of carbon can combine with only one molecule of oxygen. It can not combine with two molecules of oxygen. Incidentally one molecule of carbon is composed of one atom of carbon. One molecule of oxygen is composed of two atoms of oxygen.
The actual molecule looks like this: O=C=O (a carbon atom with double-bonded oxygen atoms on each side) Dioxide means "two oxygen atoms"
CO2 is both a compound and a molecule. It is a compound because it is made up of carbon and oxygen which have been chemically combined. It is a molecule because carbon dioxide exist as CO2 molecules, with simple molecular structure.
Carbon monoxide is CO and carbon dioxide is CO2.
No. These is no such element as "dioxide." Carbon dioxide is made of one atom of carbon and two atoms of oxygen.
One example of a molecule composed of non-metals is water (H2O), which consists of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom. Other examples include carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and ammonia (NH3).