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The number of particals (molecules, atoms, ions etc.) in one mole of ANY substance is the same: 6.022*1023 (Avogadro's number)
mole- a chemical term.
The short term for carbon dioxide is CO2 oxygen is O2 water is H2O starch is C12H24O12 glucose is C6H12O6.Answered by Grant
Water is one such molecule, being H2O. The molecules of sucrose and glucose also have the same two to one ratio of hydrogen to oxygen. Sucrose is C12H22O11, and glucose is C6H12O6.
Mole can refer to a small burrowing creatue, a sauce forund in Spanish cooking, or a chemistry term.
The number of particals (molecules, atoms, ions etc.) in one mole of ANY substance is the same: 6.022*1023 (Avogadro's number)
mole- a chemical term.
H20 2 parts hydrogen, 1 part oxygen
The short term for carbon dioxide is CO2 oxygen is O2 water is H2O starch is C12H24O12 glucose is C6H12O6.Answered by Grant
MOLE
MOLE
The role of hydrogen gas, H2, in the formation of a water molecule, H2O is rather simple. It reacts with 1/2 mole of oxygen to form the water: H2 + 1/2 O2 → H2O or 2 H2 + O2 → 2 H2O Each hydrogen in the hydrogen gas is oxidized from (0) to (+1) and is reducing the oxygen from (0) to (-II) in oxidation state.
Anoxic.
ternary oxyacid
There is no slang term for oxygen.
They are all composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, in which hydrogen and oxygen are present in the ratio of 2H:1O (like water, hence the term "hydrate"). The term carbohydrate means carbon combined with water.
The term "mole" is the same as the term "dozen", except that the mole represents a much greater number. Whereas "a dozen eggs" means 12 eggs, "1 mole of eggs" means 6.03x1023 eggs. The reason for using such a large number is that there are typically huge numbers of molecules involved in any chemical reaction in Chemistry.