Respiration:
C6 H12 O6 + 6 (O2) -à 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + 36 ATP
*** NADH + H+ , coA, Oxaloacetate, CO2, ATP, FADH2, enzymes, H2O
Fermentation:
Pyruvate + NADH + H+ à NAD+ + Lactate/ Ethanol
*** NAD+, Lactate, ATP, enzymes, ATP
The equation for cellular respiration is as follows (products are on the right):
C6H12O6 (aq) + 6 O2 (g) → 6 CO2 (g) + 6 H2O (l)
ΔG = -2880 kJ per mole of C6H12O6
I think it is glucose
Water, Carbon dioxide, and Energy.
carbon dioxide and water and ATP
Carbon dioxide is the most common respiration product
The product of aerobic breakdown of glucose is pyruvate. Since this is an exergonic reaction, there is no energy required to start it off.
Amylose is made up of α(1→4) bonded glucose monomers, so glucose is the only product of complete hydrolytic breakdown.
The process is called respiration, plants respire too but only at night. The word equation for this is: Glucose + Oxygen = Carbon Dioxide + Water + Energy
The products of aerobic respiration are water and carbon dioxide. The products of anaerobic respiration are carbon dioxide and either lactic acid or alcohol. The waste product of anaerobic respiration is lactic acid (in animals). In plants, ethanol is the waste product.
ATP is produced from cellular respiration by the breakdown of glucose.
The breakdown of glucose to carbon dioxide and water occurs during glycolysis and aerobic respiration in cellular respiration. The carbon dioxide is a waste product.
reactants: fructose and glucose product: sucrose
Glucose and galactose
Pyruvic acid
Glucose is a product of photosynthesis and a reactant in cellular respiration.
The product of respiration glucose when it convert into form of energy. BY Tanishq
isn't glucose a product of photosynthesis??!
No ,it is not a by product.It is a reactant in respiration
the end product of photosynthesis is sucrose which is converted to glucose. this glucose is used in respiration to producepyruvic acid..
Glucose
Lactic acid. It lets your muscles function with a lack of oxygen (anaerobic respiration instead of aerobic respiration).