Aerobic Respiration
- Aerobic respiration is the series of chemical reactions occurring inside living cells that use oxygen to completely break down nutrient molecules (primarily glucose) to release energy for metabolic processes.
- Since it completely oxidizes glucose, aerobic respiration releases a relatively large amount of energy compared to anaerobic respiration. Most of these reactions take place inside specialized cellular structures called mitochondria.
Equations of aerobic respiration
Word equation
$\text{glucose} + \text{oxygen} \rightarrow \text{carbon dioxide} + \text{water}$
Balanced chemical equation
$C_6H_{12}O_6 + 6O_2 \rightarrow 6CO_2 + 6H_2O$
Key components
- The reactants are glucose from digested food and oxygen which is absorbed by gas exchange surfaces.
- The products are carbon dioxide and water (both are metabolic waste products excreted by the body).
- Useful energy is transferred to the cell in the form of ATP.