Sure not a salt, it is a hexose sugar like e.g. glucose or fructose or galactose
The chemical formula for glucose is C6H12O6.
Water - H2O Sodium chloride (table salt) - NaCl Carbon dioxide - CO2 Glucose - C6H12O6 Ammonia - NH3
The chemical formula for glucose is C6H12O6.
Fructose or fruit Sugar (also levulose or laevulose) is a 6-carbon polyhydroxyketone. It is an isomer of glucose, meaning both have the same molecular formula (C6H12O6), but they differ structurally. Glucose is an aldehyde i.s.o. ketone.For structural formula cf. 'Related links'
C6h12o6 + c6h12o6 + c6h12o6 → c18h32o16
Sugar: C6H12O6 Table Salt: NaCl Baking Soda (Sodium Bicarbonate): NaHCO3
yes.The chemical structure of salt(NaCl) is simpler than that of the sugar (C6H12O6)
The chemical formula for glucose is C6H12O6.
C6H12O6---> 2C2H5OH + 2CO2
C6H12O6.
C6H12O6
there are many many compounds used in everyday. These are things like salt (NaCl) and water (H2O)and sugar (C6H12O6) .
The chemical formula for brown sugar is the same as the formula for white sugar. It is C12H22O11. Hope that helps :)
C24-H48-O24: also - either Cellulose or Gylcogen - depending upon their Bonding Configuration.
Sodium Chloride (NaCl) is table salt. Glucose (C6H12O6) is sugar. Water (H2O) is obviously, water.
Water - H2O Sodium chloride (table salt) - NaCl Carbon dioxide - CO2 Glucose - C6H12O6 Ammonia - NH3
c24h44o22+2h2o