- Aug 15, 2006
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Something funny I found with chemical equation for respiration:
C6 H12 O6 (glucose, 180.18 g/mol) + 6 O2 (oxygen gas, 32 g/mol) -> 6 CO2 (carbon dioxide, 44.01 g/mol) + 6 H2O(water, 18.02 g/mol)
Assuming that the amount of CO2 left in the human body is negligible, one mole of reactions results in a net loss of 72.06 grams of mass (180.18 from glucose - 6 * 18.02 from water = 72.06).
This means a person loses mass when he/she breathes. Why don't we notice this? Do other processes make up for this or is this too insignificant to really affect our weight?
C6 H12 O6 (glucose, 180.18 g/mol) + 6 O2 (oxygen gas, 32 g/mol) -> 6 CO2 (carbon dioxide, 44.01 g/mol) + 6 H2O(water, 18.02 g/mol)
Assuming that the amount of CO2 left in the human body is negligible, one mole of reactions results in a net loss of 72.06 grams of mass (180.18 from glucose - 6 * 18.02 from water = 72.06).
This means a person loses mass when he/she breathes. Why don't we notice this? Do other processes make up for this or is this too insignificant to really affect our weight?
