Krebs Cycle
The part of cellular respiration in which glucose is broken down is called the glycolysis. The chemical energy to produce ATP come from the breakdown of carbon based molecules into the smaller molecules.
I'm pretty sure the answer is 285Kcal. 686Kcal is the possible energy yield of a glucose molecule. 263Kcal is the energy available to a cell as a result of cellular respiration usually (36 ATP molecules); cellular respiration is about 39% efficient.
it combines two or more molecules when bonding
In cellular respiration, the final electron acceptor of the electron transport chain is half of a diatomic oxygen molecule. This molecule is then reduced when it gains two low-energy electrons attached to two hydrogens, making a molecule of water as a by-product of cellular respiration.
Carbon dioxide.
Biology textbooks often state that 38 ATP molecules can be made per oxidized glucose molecule during cellular respiration (2 from glycolysis, 2 from the Krebs cycle, and about 34 from the electron transport system).
2 atp molecules
One molecule of glucose can produce 36 molecules of ATP from aerobic cellular respiration.
Cellular respiration uses one molecule of glucose to produce what?
36 ATP molecules can be produced from a single molecule of glucose through the complete process of cellular respiration.
ATP is the energy-storage product of cellular respiration. Aerobic cellular respiration produces around 36 ATP molecules for every glucose molecule broken down. Anaerobic respiration results in a net gain of 2 ATP molecules.
36 ATP molecules can be produced from a single molecule of glucose through the complete process of cellular respiration.
They can accept electrons and transfer mos of their energy to another Molecule.
The process of cellular respiration produces 6CO2 molecules and 6H2O molecules per glucose molecule. Between 32 and 36 ATP are also produced by the cycle; these ATP are used as the cell's primary source of energy.
During cellular respiration, the energy rich molelcule ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is produced.Cells undergoing aerobic respiration produce 6 molecules of carbon dioxide, 6 molecules of water, and up to 30 molecules of ATP (adenosine triphosphate), which is directly used to produce energy, from each molecule of glucose in the presence of surplus oxygen.
Cellular respiration is the process by which producers and consumers get energy from food and convert that energy into molecules of ATP, the energy molecule of the cell.
The part of cellular respiration in which glucose is broken down is called the glycolysis. The chemical energy to produce ATP come from the breakdown of carbon based molecules into the smaller molecules.