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Posted (edited)

As far as I am concerned, photosynthesis does produce h2o

But after studying both light and dark reaction, I didn't find out any water molecule produced

Can you help me point out which reaction does that

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Edited by NghiaFromVN
Posted

I may not be following you. Photosynthesis uses water as a reactant and produces molecular oxygen. I have not looked carefully at the carbon assimilation reactions with respect to whether they are water-producing or water-consuming.

Posted

I edited my post. Each co2 fixed reqUIRE 2 NADPH so 6 need 12, which mean 12 pairs of electron or 12 water molecules. That is easy to understand, but where does that water product come from ?

Posted

No, 6co2 will require 12 pairs of electron to enter the Calvin cycle, so you cannot subtract 6 h20, so where do those molecules come from ?

12 pairs of electron means 12 water molecules

Posted

I am going to suggest this bookkeeping as a simple way to make the electrons add up. Six carbon atoms gain a total of 24 electrons. The twelve oxygen atoms in six molecules of carbon dioxide can lose 24 electrons (each one changes from an oxidation number of -2 to 0). Six water molecules are needed to hydrate the six carbon atoms, in order to produce a carbohydrate. This way of thinking about photosynthesis is not intended to be mechanistically accurate; it is only intended to describe the stoichiometry.

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