Polysaccharides
An inorganic molecule is a molecule that does not contain carbon-hydrogen (C-H) bonds. Examples include water (H2O), sodium chloride (NaCl), and carbon dioxide (CO2). These molecules are usually simpler in structure compared to organic molecules.
Organic molecules have carbon while inorganic do not. An example of an organic molecule is that of proteins and carbohydrates. Inorganic examples are table salt and hydrochloric acid (stomach acid).
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.
They are both made out of molecules: Carbon dioxide = CO2-molecules, Oxygen = O2-molecules.
Those molecules containing ONE Carbon atom
Bio molecules are large, complex moleucles build from smaller, simpler, repeating units. Most bio molecules contain carbon atoms that are bonded together in chains and rings.
Six molecules of carbon dioxide are used to produce one 6-carbon sugar molecule through the process of photosynthesis.
No, an oxygen molecule (O2) is not considered an organic molecule. Organic molecules contain carbon atoms, while oxygen molecules do not contain carbon. Organic molecules are the building blocks of life and are typically associated with living organisms.
CO diffuses faster than CO2 because it is a smaller molecule
One molecule of glucose requires 6 molecules of carbon dioxide to be produced through the process of photosynthesis.
six molecules
No, water molecules are made of Hydrogen and Oxygen, there is no Carbon.