carbon,hydrogen and oxygen atoms form an org......................................................
A single carbon atom bonds with a single oxygen atom to form Carbon Monoxide a tasteless, odourless and poisonous gas to humans.The chemical equation is:C + O2 -> CO + H2OHope this helps!
The term "carbohydrate" comes from the chemical composition of these compounds, which consist of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen molecules. The "carbo-" prefix refers to carbon, while the "-hydrate" suffix suggests the presence of water molecules in the structure.
No. Carbohydrates are carbon with water (most of the time). The ratio is 1 carbon to 1 hydrogen and 2 oxygens. The name does tell you: carbo- (carbon) + hydrate (water). So the generic formula is CHO2.I think you have it backwards. The general formula for a carbohydrate is CH2O, not CHO2.
Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen are the general components of a carbohydrate. The general formula of a carbohydrate is as follows: Cx(H2x)Ox *Even if it is not known that these are the components of a carbohydrate, it can be deduced from the name: CARBO-HYD-RATE The "carbo" refers to "carbon", the "hyd" refers to "hydrogen", and any molecule which contains "ate" at the end will ALWAYS contain oxygen.
Carbon hydrogen and oxygen -- henece the name carbo -hydrate
The only three atoms found in carbohydrates are Carbon (C), Oxygen (O), and Hydrogen (H). They are named carbohydrates after these three elements, carbo from carbon and hydratefrom water, which is H2O.
binding to the hydrogen ions creating carbo-hyrogenomonoxide, therefor blocking the atp synthanes gaining 0 net ATP
carbon,hydrogen and oxygen atoms form an org......................................................
Yes, the word "carbohydrate" has its roots in "carbo-" meaning carbon and "hydrate" referring to water. Carbohydrates are compounds consisting of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms, with the general formula (CH2O)n.
Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen.[This can be found enclosed in the name: 'carbohydrate', in which 'carbo' refers to carbon, and 'hydrate' means water, H2O, made of hydrogen and oxygen]
Carbon, oxygen and hydrogen. Proteins can contain other elements as well (most commonly nitrogen in the amine group), but the only elements in all three groups are carbon, oxygen and nitrogen.
in the lungs
Carbohydrates are made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, all in a constant 1:2:1 ratio. Hence the name Carbo (carbon) hydra (hydrogen) and the ending 'ate' refers to oxygen.
A single carbon atom bonds with a single oxygen atom to form Carbon Monoxide a tasteless, odourless and poisonous gas to humans.The chemical equation is:C + O2 -> CO + H2OHope this helps!
Bread is a carbohydrate, so look at the word. The carbo in carbohydrate means carbon, and the hydrate means hydrogen and oxygen. So yes bread does contain carbon.
Yes. Carbohydrates are composed of carbon (carbo-) and water (-hydrate). Therefore, the hydrogen and oxygen are always in a 2:1 ratio. Yes: Almost all carbohydrates all have the empirical formula CnH2nOn, in which n represents an integer. Therefore, the empirical formula corresponds to that of a postulated monohydrate of carbon.