In aerobic oxidation, the complete oxidation of one molecule of glucose typically produces about 30 to 32 molecules of ATP. This process occurs through glycolysis, the citric acid cycle, and oxidative phosphorylation. The exact number can vary slightly depending on the efficiency of the electron transport chain and the shuttle systems used to transport electrons into the mitochondria.
72 molecules of ATP are produced .
36
A total of 38 ATP molecules are produced at the end of aerobic respiration per molecule of glucose.
total 38 atp but 2 atp used in glycolysis net profit is 36 atp
The stages of aerobic respiration are glycolysis (cytoplasm: 2 ATP), pyruvate oxidation (mitochondrial matrix: 0 ATP directly produced), the citric acid cycle (mitochondrial matrix: 2 ATP), and oxidative phosphorylation (inner mitochondrial membrane: approximately 28-34 ATP).
In aerobic respiration, approximately 30-32 molecules of ATP are produced per molecule of glucose, while in anaerobic respiration (specifically during glycolysis), only 2 molecules of ATP are produced per molecule of glucose.
In aerobic respiration, one molecule of glucose yields 38 ATP molecules, eight produced during glycolysis, six from the link reaction and 24 from the Krebs cycle. The net gain is 36 ATP, as two of the ATP molecules produced from glycolysis are used up in the re-oxidation of the hydrogen carrier molecule NAD. Therefore; There are 38 ATP molecules produced but net gain is 36 ATP
In both, ATP is produced. In Fermentation, each turn of the cycle produces 2 ATP, and in Aerobic Cellular Respiration, each turn of the cycle produces 38 ATP. You can see which one works better...the huge difference in the number of ATP produced.
Total of 40 ATP
ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is produced during aerobic respiration, which occurs in the mitochondria.
Around 36-38 ATP molecules are produced through complete aerobic respiration.
in aerobic respiration there r 3 stages Glycolisis, ATP synthesis, terminal oxidation