Sugar contains 6 percent of hydrogen content
Fat is not a chemical compound, so it does not have a chemical equation, so it does not have a measured amount of hydrogen. (Sugar has 12 hydrogen atoms.)
The reaction of common household hydrogen peroxide is rather boring. But pure H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide) mixed with sugar which is C12H22O11 results in the production of H2O and CO2.
I know that table salt has no hydrogen atoms; NaCl2
8.9%
Carbon, hydrogen and oxygen.
water:H2O, about 11.1% hydrogen sugar,C6H12O6,about 6.67% so,the answer is water
sugar molecules :)
Fat is not a chemical compound, so it does not have a chemical equation, so it does not have a measured amount of hydrogen. (Sugar has 12 hydrogen atoms.)
Sugar is composed carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. So a carbon free sugar would be hydrogen and oxygen, which makes hydronium, hydroxide and water
Sugar is made from carbon, hydrogen and oxygen atoms.
No. Sugar is composed entirely of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.
The constituent element of sugar is: *carbon *hydrogen *oxygen
CAtalyst
Sugars are composed of Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen
The reaction of common household hydrogen peroxide is rather boring. But pure H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide) mixed with sugar which is C12H22O11 results in the production of H2O and CO2.
The constituent element of sugar is: *carbon *hydrogen *oxygen
Carbon, hydrogen and oxygencarbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. it is called glucose, fructose, saccharose, lactose, ....