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Two monosaccharide molecules are needed to form one sucrose molecule.
How many monosaccharides are made up to make glucose molecule
When made from to monosaccharides: one water molecule 2 C6H12O6 --> C12H22O11 + H2O However when made from CO2 and H2O by photosynthesis 11 molecules water are NEEDED! 12CO2 + 11H2O --> C12H22O11 + 12O2
Hydrolysis or a hydrolytic is a reaction in which a water molecule i.e Sucrose, is needed to break up a complex molecule i.e glucose, into smaller molecule.
To form a molecule of fat, the two types of molecules that are needed are glycerol and fatty acid. One glycerol molecule attaching itself to three molecules of fatty acid will give one molecule of fat.
Sucrose is a disaccharhide; each monomer unit consists of one molecule of glucose & one molecule of fructose (each of which have the same chemical formula of C6H12O6); they become joined together by a condensation reaction, meaning that one molecule of water (H20) is lost between them. The chemical formula for sucrose therefore becomes C6H22O11
To form a molecule of fat, the two types of molecules that are needed are glycerol and fatty acid. One glycerol molecule attaching itself to three molecules of fatty acid will give one molecule of fat.
According to the NISTUnits=SI Sucrose has the empirical formula (good enough for this question, full chemical formula not needed) of C12H22O11. That's 12 Carbons, 22 Hydrogens, and 11 Oxygens. Therefore 12+22+11=45 atoms in one molecule of sucrose.
amino acids
It takes 2 monosaccharide molecules to form a maltose molecule. Those are 2 glucose molecules. So 2 glucose molecules join together to make 1 maltose molecule.
The answer is 6,023.1023.
b1-b2b-x2