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Respiration

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visibility 96update 10 months agobookmarkshare

In this topic you will:

  • find out how every living cell gets the energy it needs to stay alive
  • do an experiment to investigate how, in respiration, some energy is released as heat
  • think about the difference between breathing and respiration.
 

Key words

  • glucose
  • mitochondria
 

Using energy to stay alive

Our bodies need energy for many different reasons. For example:

People jumping under a bridge

We use energy when we move around.

People working on laptops

We use energy to send electrical impulses along neurones.

People keeping warm in winter

We use energy to keep our bodies warm when it is cold.

All of our energy comes from the food that we eat. Carbohydrates are especially good for giving us energy.

When we eat food containing carbohydrates, our digestive system breaks the carbohydrates down to a kind of sugar called glucose. The glucose goes into our blood. The blood delivers glucose to every cell in the body. The cells use the glucose to get the energy that they need.

 

Quick Fact

Your body doesn't use food directly for energy. First, it breaks down carbohydrates into a sugar called glucose. This glucose is carried in the blood to cells, where it's used to release the energy your body needs.

 

Common Mistake

Many students think we get energy directly from food as soon as we eat it. In reality, our body must first break down the carbohydrates into glucose, which is then transported by the blood and used by cells to release energy.

 

Releasing energy from glucose

Energy must be changed from one type to another, or be transferred, in order to do something.

The energy in glucose is locked up inside it. Glucose is an energy store. Before your cells can use the energy, it has to be released from the glucose.

This is done by tiny structures called mitochondria that are found inside cells. Most cells have many mitochondria inside them. Mitochondria release energy from glucose, so that the cells can use the energy.

The mitochondria carry out a chemical reaction called aerobic respiration. Aerobic means that it uses oxygen, from the air. Here is the word equation for aerobic respiration:

glucose oxygen → carbon dioxide water

In this reaction, some of the energy inside the glucose is released. This is done in a very controlled way. Just a little bit of energy is released at a time – just enough for the cell’s needs.

Diagram showing energy released from glucose inside mitochondria

Energy is released from glucose inside mitochondria
 

Quick Fact

Cells release energy from glucose through a process called aerobic respiration. This happens inside structures called mitochondria, which use oxygen to break down glucose and release energy in small, controlled amounts.

 

Common Mistake

It’s easy to assume that glucose itself is the energy the body uses. In reality, energy must be released from glucose inside mitochondria through a process called aerobic respiration. This controlled release provides usable energy for cells.

 

Questions

1. Neurones contain more mitochondria than cheek cells. Suggest why.
Show Answer

Neurones require more energy to transmit electrical impulses, so they contain more mitochondria to release energy through aerobic respiration.

2. Look at the word equation for aerobic respiration.
a. What are the reactants in this reaction?
Show Answer

Glucose and oxygen

b. What are the products of this reaction?
Show Answer

Carbon dioxide and water

3. Use the equation for aerobic respiration to explain why the air that you breathe out contains more carbon dioxide than the air that you breathe in.
Show Answer

During aerobic respiration, glucose reacts with oxygen to produce carbon dioxide as a waste product. This extra carbon dioxide is removed from the body when we breathe out.

 

Respiration and heat production

In Stage 7, you learned that every time energy is transferred or transformed, some of it is changed to heat energy.

In respiration, chemical energy stored in glucose is transferred to other substances, so that cells can use it. In this process, some of the energy is changed to heat energy. So respiring cells get a little bit warmer than their surroundings.

 

Quick Fact

During respiration, not all of the energy from glucose is used for work. Some of it is transferred as heat energy, which slightly raises the temperature of respiring cells compared to their surroundings.

 

Common Mistake

Some students think heat is added from outside the body during respiration. In fact, heat is produced as a by-product when cells convert glucose into usable energy. That’s why respiring cells get warmer on their own.

 
 

 

 

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