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No, helium does not produce carbon dioxide. Helium is an inert gas and does not react chemically with other substances to produce carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is produced from the combustion of carbon-containing compounds.
Yes, algae can produce carbon dioxide through respiration when they consume oxygen for energy production. However, algae also absorb carbon dioxide during photosynthesis, where they convert carbon dioxide into oxygen and glucose in the presence of sunlight.
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The ingredient in bread that produces carbon dioxide is yeast.
Burning coal (a fossil fuel) releases carbon dioxide and sulphur dioxide.
Carbon has a freezing point of about 3527oC under standard conditions. If you meant carbon dioxide, it freezes from a gas phase ar -78oC Carbon has a freezing point of about 3527oC under standard conditions. If you meant carbon dioxide, it freezes from a gas phase at -78oC
No, helium does not produce carbon dioxide. Helium is an inert gas and does not react chemically with other substances to produce carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is produced from the combustion of carbon-containing compounds.
Yes, forest fires do produce carbon dioxide.
Animals produce carbon dioxide. Animals produce carbon dioxide
Yes. Plankton produce carbon dioxide during cellular respiration.
No, lactic acid fermentation does not produce carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide and oxygen are both gases under ordinary conditions. Carbon dioxide molecules consist of a single atom of carbon and two of oxygen. As a simplification, breathing animals inhale oxygen, use it to produce energy from carbon compounds that they eat and exhale carbon dioxide as a waste product.
Yes. Burning carbon or a carbon compound will produce carbon dioxide.
Any burning (oxidation reaction) produce carbon dioxide.
Yes, algae can produce carbon dioxide through respiration when they consume oxygen for energy production. However, algae also absorb carbon dioxide during photosynthesis, where they convert carbon dioxide into oxygen and glucose in the presence of sunlight.
They are classified as gases at standard conditions. And by "thing," you mean matter.
Carbon and Oxygen