The cellular respiration equation is as follows:
C6H12O6 + O2 = CO2 + H2O and for cells +ATP
So, you need C6H12O6, which is glucose and O2 which is oxygen. Not only glucose will help cellular respiration. You can also have proteins or lipids/fats to have it work. Glucose is what I was always taught. Hope this answers your question!
The total amount of ATP produced from cellular respiration is approximately 36-38 ATP molecules per glucose molecule. This includes ATP generated through glycolysis, the citric acid cycle, and oxidative phosphorylation.
Cells need glucose and oxygen as starting materials for cellular respiration. Glucose is the primary source of energy, while oxygen is required as the final electron acceptor in the electron transport chain to generate ATP.
Carbon dioxide is produced during the process of cellular respiration During cellular respiration energy is released in the form of ATP. Oxygen is reduced to form water and Carbon of glucose combines with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide. Thus, carbon dioxide, water and energy are produced during cellular respiration.
carbon dioxide and water (CO2 and H2O) The sugar used in cellular respiration is glucose.
yes. NO. Glycolysis does not produce carbon dioxide. In aerobic respiration, carbon dioxide is produced in the citric acid (or Krebs cycle) which is a different step of the metabolic breakdown of glucose.
Carbon dioxide and water are produced. Energy is also produced but that's not a material.
In Cellular (Aerobic) Respiration: Glucose + Oxygen → Carbon Dioxide + Water Carbon Dioxide and Water are produced.
glucose
Energy produced in photosynthesis is put into a usable form through cellular respiration.
Cellular respiration needs glucose. Glucose is produced by photosynthesis
Sugar produced from respiration.
glucose
yes
Photosynthesis CO2 + H2O + Sunlight Cellular respiration O + Glucose Raw materials for these processes.
Of corse,glucose is produced in photosynthesis.Glucose is broken in respiration.
mitochondria
Yes, carbon dioxide is produced as a byproduct of cellular respiration in the mitochondria of cells. It is not a reactant in the initial steps of cellular respiration, but is produced during the Krebs cycle and then released as waste.