No, water is not a carbohydrate.
C6h12o6 = glucose and h2o = water
The hydrogen-oxygen ratio in a carbohydrate molecule is typically 2:1, mirroring the ratio found in water (H2O). This means that for every carbon atom in a carbohydrate, there are roughly two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom present.
There is no organic molecule with that configuration. All organic molecules have carbon in them.
what is one word that means carbohydrate monomer
Sugar is a common synonym for carbohydrate.
Cn(H2O)n
H2o + co2 ----> o2 + carbohydrate
carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen with the general formula of Cm(h2o)n
CHO is the element symbol if that's what you mean
NO, ATP is Glucose; a carbohydrate is A carbohydrate is an organic compound which has the empirical formula Cm(H2O)n; that is, consists only of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen, with a hydrogen:oxygen atom ratio of 2:1 (as in water)
i) O2, & ii) H2O.
C6h12o6 = glucose and h2o = water
micro-organisms
== == The general formula of carbohydrates is (CH2O)n
The hydrogen-oxygen ratio in a carbohydrate molecule is typically 2:1, mirroring the ratio found in water (H2O). This means that for every carbon atom in a carbohydrate, there are roughly two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen atom present.
Yes H is used to produce carbohydrate. This is from wikipediaThe general equation for photosynthesis is therefore:2n CO2 + 2n H2O + photons → 2(CH2O)n + n O2 + 2n ACarbon dioxide + electron donor + light energy → carbohydrate + oxygen + oxidized electron donor
Carbohydrate