Sure not a salt, it is a hexose sugar like e.g. glucose or fructose or galactose
No, C6H6 is cyclohexane, a cyclic alkane, or an unsaturated carbohydrate chain. A salt is an ionically bonded solid such as NaCl (table salt), KBr, MgBr2, etc... Acid + Base = H2O and a salt
C6H12O6 is the chemical formula of fructose and other monosaccharides.
They are not salts.
The chemical formula for glucose is C6H12O6.
this is a picture of c6h12o6
Salt - NaCl Sugar (glucose) - C6H12O6 Ammonia - NH3 Alcohol (form of ethanol) - C2H6 That's all i can think of
C6h12o6 = glucose and h2o = water
The chemical formula for glucose is C6H12O6.
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)
3c6h12o6
The chemical formula for glucose is C6H12O6.
C6H12O6---> 2C2H5OH + 2CO2
C6H12O6 isn't that easy? your are from connections academy aren't you? hahaha
C6H12O6
C6H12O6.
there are many many compounds used in everyday. These are things like salt (NaCl) and water (H2O)and sugar (C6H12O6) .
this is a picture of c6h12o6
C24-H48-O24: also - either Cellulose or Gylcogen - depending upon their Bonding Configuration.
The chemical formula for brown sugar is the same as the formula for white sugar. It is C12H22O11. Hope that helps :)