Sugar contains 6 percent of hydrogen content
I know that table salt has no hydrogen atoms; NaCl2
The three elements in simple sugar are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. Monosaccharides are simple sugar and are the smallest type of sugar.
No, fat molecules have more hydrogen atoms compared to sugar molecules. Fat molecules are made up of long chains of carbon atoms bonded to hydrogen atoms, while sugar molecules are typically smaller and contain fewer hydrogen atoms.
The coffee sweetener made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen is sugar (sucrose).
Yes it does. i did it in a lab in school with lifesavers
I know that table salt has no hydrogen atoms; NaCl2
water:H2O, about 11.1% hydrogen sugar,C6H12O6,about 6.67% so,the answer is water
The constituent elements of sugar are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. Sugar is a carbohydrate composed of these elements.
sugar molecules :)
The three elements in simple sugar are carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. Monosaccharides are simple sugar and are the smallest type of sugar.
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
That depends on what kind of sugar you're talking about. Table sugar, or sucrose, has the formula C12H22O11. One molecule of sucrose has 22 hydrogen atoms. Blood sugar, or glucose, has the formula C6H12O6. One molecule of glucose has 12 hydrogen atoms. Other types of sugar have different formulas. If you know the chemical formula, look at the subscript to the right of the H to see how many hydrogen atoms are in one molecule of sugar.
No, fat molecules have more hydrogen atoms compared to sugar molecules. Fat molecules are made up of long chains of carbon atoms bonded to hydrogen atoms, while sugar molecules are typically smaller and contain fewer hydrogen atoms.
Sugars are composed of Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen
The coffee sweetener made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen is sugar (sucrose).