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in the fraction of glucose (C6H12O6) with oxygen (O2) to produce carbon dioxide (CO2) and (H2O), you need a ratio of molecules equal to: 1 glucose, 6 oxygen: 6 carbon dioxide: 6 water

-how many moles of oxygen would you need?
-how many moles of carbon dioxide and water would you produce
-how many grams of carbon dioxide and water would you produce?

please explain calculations. Sorry if this is too much to ask.

2007-11-01 06:48:33 · 1 answers · asked by the common cold 4 in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

atomic mass of carbon: 10.0107
hydrogen: 1.00794
oxygen: 15.9994

2007-11-01 06:51:17 · update #1

scratch the stuff above.

in the reaction of glucose (C6H12O6) with oxygen (O2) to produce carbon dioxide (CO2) and water(H2O), you need a ratio of molecules equal to: 1 glucose, 6 oxygen: 6 carbon dioxide: 6 water

-how many moles of oxygen would you need?
-how many moles of carbon dioxide and water would you produce
-how many grams of carbon dioxide and water would you produce?

atomic mass of
carbon: 12.0107
hydrogen: 1.00794
oxygen: 15.9994

2007-11-01 13:41:09 · update #2

1 answers

Probably you have some typo: "in the fraction of glucose"? and "atomic mass of carbon: 10.0107"?

This question can not be solved unless you specify the amount of glucose.

2007-11-01 08:49:34 · answer #1 · answered by Hahaha 7 · 0 0

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