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11 August, 18:10

After Callie obtained her original results, she wanted to dig deeper. She determined that the germinating corn seed had utilized 100 molecules of glucose in the first few seconds that she performed the experiment. If these data are accurate, how many carbon dioxide molecules would Callie expect to have been released as a waste during this same amount of time? Explain how you arrived at your answer. The formula for cellular respiration is shown below.

C6H12O6 + 6O2 → 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy

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  1. 11 August, 21:21
    0
    Answer: 600 molecules of CO2

    Explanation:

    C6H12O6 + 6O2 → 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy

    From the above balanced equation, 1 mole of glucose produces 6 moles of CO2.

    Mathematically,

    1 mole of C6H12O6 = 6 moles of CO2

    Let,

    100 moles of C6H12O6 = x mole of CO2

    By simply cross multiply,

    x mole of CO2 = (6 * 100) / 1 mole

    x mole of CO2 = 600 mole

    Callie should expect 600 molecules of carbon dioxide to have been released as a waste during this same amount of time.
  2. 11 August, 21:22
    0
    Callie expect 600 molecules of CO2 to have been released as a waste during the same amount of time.

    Explanation:

    During cellular respiration 1 molecule of glucose undergoes oxidation to form 6 molecules of CO2 as a waste product.

    According to the question callie determined that the germinating corn seed had utilized 100 molecules of glucose.

    So 100 molecules of glucose will release 100*6=600 molecules of CO2 as a waste product.
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