CHEBI:16526 - carbon dioxide

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ChEBI Name carbon dioxide
ChEBI ID CHEBI:16526
Definition A one-carbon compound with formula CO2 in which the carbon is attached to each oxygen atom by a double bond. A colourless, odourless gas under normal conditions, it is produced during respiration by all animals, fungi and microorganisms that depend directly or indirectly on living or decaying plants for food.
Stars This entity has been manually annotated by the ChEBI Team.
Secondary ChEBI IDs CHEBI:48829, CHEBI:3283, CHEBI:13282, CHEBI:13283, CHEBI:13285, CHEBI:13284, CHEBI:23011
Supplier Information ZINC000003869290
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Carbon dioxide is a chemical compound with the chemical formula CO2. It is made up of molecules that each have one carbon atom covalently double bonded to two oxygen atoms. It is found in the gas state at room temperature and at normally-encountered concentrations it is odorless. As the source of carbon in the carbon cycle, atmospheric CO2 is the primary carbon source for life on Earth. In the air, carbon dioxide is transparent to visible light but absorbs infrared radiation, acting as a greenhouse gas. Carbon dioxide is soluble in water and is found in groundwater, lakes, ice caps, and seawater. It is a trace gas in Earth's atmosphere at 421 parts per million (ppm), or about 0.042% (as of May 2022) having risen from pre-industrial levels of 280 ppm or about 0.028%. Burning fossil fuels is the main cause of these increased CO2 concentrations, which are the primary cause of climate change. Its concentration in Earth's pre-industrial atmosphere since late in the Precambrian was regulated by organisms and geological features. Plants, algae and cyanobacteria use energy from sunlight to synthesize carbohydrates from carbon dioxide and water in a process called photosynthesis, which produces oxygen as a waste product. In turn, oxygen is consumed and CO2 is released as waste by all aerobic organisms when they metabolize organic compounds to produce energy by respiration. CO2 is released from organic materials when they decay or combust, such as in forest fires. When carbon dioxide dissolves in water, it forms carbonate and mainly bicarbonate (HCO−3), which causes ocean acidification as atmospheric CO2 levels increase. Carbon dioxide is 53% more dense than dry air, but is long lived and thoroughly mixes in the atmosphere. About half of excess CO2 emissions to the atmosphere are absorbed by land and ocean carbon sinks. These sinks can become saturated and are volatile, as decay and wildfires result in the CO2 being released back into the atmosphere. CO2, or the carbon it holds, is eventually sequestered (stored for the long term) in rocks and organic deposits like coal, petroleum and natural gas. Nearly all CO2 produced by humans goes into the atmosphere. Less than 1% of CO2 produced annually is put to commercial use, mostly in the fertilizer industry and in the oil and gas industry for enhanced oil recovery. Other commercial applications include food and beverage production, metal fabrication, cooling, fire suppression and stimulating plant growth in greenhouses.: 3 
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Formula CO2
Net Charge 0
Average Mass 44.010
Monoisotopic Mass 43.98983
InChI InChI=1S/CO2/c2-1-3
InChIKey CURLTUGMZLYLDI-UHFFFAOYSA-N
SMILES O=C=O
Metabolite of Species Details
Mus musculus (NCBI:txid10090) Source: BioModels - MODEL1507180067 See: PubMed
Saccharomyces cerevisiae (NCBI:txid4932) Source: yeast.sf.net See: PubMed
Escherichia coli (NCBI:txid562) See: PubMed
Homo sapiens (NCBI:txid9606) See: DOI
Roles Classification
Chemical Role(s): solvent
A liquid that can dissolve other substances (solutes) without any change in their chemical composition.
greenhouse gas
A gas in an atmosphere that absorbs and emits radiation within the thermal infrared range, so contributing to the 'greenhouse effect'.
Biological Role(s): Escherichia coli metabolite
Any bacterial metabolite produced during a metabolic reaction in Escherichia coli.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae metabolite
Any fungal metabolite produced during a metabolic reaction in Baker's yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae ).
human metabolite
Any mammalian metabolite produced during a metabolic reaction in humans (Homo sapiens).
antagonist
Substance that attaches to and blocks cell receptors that normally bind naturally occurring substances.
mouse metabolite
Any mammalian metabolite produced during a metabolic reaction in a mouse (Mus musculus).
food packaging gas
A food additive that is a (generally inert) gas which is used to envelop foodstuffs during packing and so protect them from unwanted chemical reactions such as food spoilage or oxidation during subsequent transport and storage. The term includes propellant gases, used to expel foods from a container.
food propellant
A propellant that is used to expel foods from an aerosol container.
Application(s): refrigerant
A substance used in a thermodynamic heat pump cycle or refrigeration cycle that undergoes a phase change from a gas to a liquid and back. Refrigerants are used in air-conditioning systems and freezers or refrigerators and are assigned a "R" number (by ASHRAE - formerly the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air Conditioning Engineers), which is determined systematically according to their molecular structure.
solvent
A liquid that can dissolve other substances (solutes) without any change in their chemical composition.
vasodilator agent
A drug used to cause dilation of the blood vessels.
anaesthetic
Substance which produces loss of feeling or sensation.
food packaging gas
A food additive that is a (generally inert) gas which is used to envelop foodstuffs during packing and so protect them from unwanted chemical reactions such as food spoilage or oxidation during subsequent transport and storage. The term includes propellant gases, used to expel foods from a container.
food propellant
A propellant that is used to expel foods from an aerosol container.
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ChEBI Ontology
Outgoing carbon dioxide (CHEBI:16526) has role Escherichia coli metabolite (CHEBI:76971)
carbon dioxide (CHEBI:16526) has role Saccharomyces cerevisiae metabolite (CHEBI:75772)
carbon dioxide (CHEBI:16526) has role anaesthetic (CHEBI:38867)
carbon dioxide (CHEBI:16526) has role antagonist (CHEBI:48706)
carbon dioxide (CHEBI:16526) has role food packaging gas (CHEBI:77974)
carbon dioxide (CHEBI:16526) has role food propellant (CHEBI:78017)
carbon dioxide (CHEBI:16526) has role greenhouse gas (CHEBI:76413)
carbon dioxide (CHEBI:16526) has role human metabolite (CHEBI:77746)
carbon dioxide (CHEBI:16526) has role mouse metabolite (CHEBI:75771)
carbon dioxide (CHEBI:16526) has role refrigerant (CHEBI:78433)
carbon dioxide (CHEBI:16526) has role solvent (CHEBI:46787)
carbon dioxide (CHEBI:16526) has role vasodilator agent (CHEBI:35620)
carbon dioxide (CHEBI:16526) is a carbon oxide (CHEBI:23014)
carbon dioxide (CHEBI:16526) is a gas molecular entity (CHEBI:138675)
carbon dioxide (CHEBI:16526) is a one-carbon compound (CHEBI:64708)
IUPAC Names
carbon dioxide
dioxidocarbon
methanedione
Synonyms Sources
[CO2] MolBase
Carbon dioxide KEGG COMPOUND
CARBON DIOXIDE PDBeChem
carbonic anhydride UM-BBD
CO2 KEGG COMPOUND
CO2 UniProt
E 290 ChEBI
E-290 ChEBI
E290 ChEBI
R-744 ChEBI
Manual Xrefs Databases
119 PPDB
4256 DrugCentral
752 MolBase
C00011 KEGG COMPOUND
c0131 UM-BBD
CARBON-DIOXIDE MetaCyc
Carbon_dioxide Wikipedia
CO2 PDBeChem
D00004 KEGG DRUG
HMDB0001967 HMDB
View more database links
Registry Numbers Types Sources
124-38-9 CAS Registry Number KEGG COMPOUND
124-38-9 CAS Registry Number NIST Chemistry WebBook
124-38-9 CAS Registry Number ChemIDplus
1900390 Reaxys Registry Number Reaxys
989 Gmelin Registry Number Gmelin
Citations
Christa G, Zimorski V, Woehle C, Tielens AG, Wägele H, Martin WF, Gould SB (2014)
Plastid-bearing sea slugs fix CO2 in the light but do not require photosynthesis to survive.
Proceedings. Biological sciences 281, 20132493 [PubMed:24258718]
[show Abstract]
Coelho Junior A, Parra JR (2013)
Effect of carbon dioxide (CO2) on mortality and reproduction of Anagasta kuehniella (Zeller 1879), in mass rearing, aiming at the production of Trichogramma spp.
Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciencias 85, 823-831 [PubMed:23828359]
[show Abstract]
Singh SK, Badgujar G, Reddy VR, Fleisher DH, Bunce JA (2013)
Carbon dioxide diffusion across stomata and mesophyll and photo-biochemical processes as affected by growth CO2 and phosphorus nutrition in cotton.
Journal of plant physiology 170, 801-813 [PubMed:23384758]
[show Abstract]
Scott DR, Marcus EA, Wen Y, Singh S, Feng J, Sachs G (2010)
Cytoplasmic histidine kinase (HP0244)-regulated assembly of urease with UreI, a channel for urea and its metabolites, CO2, NH3, and NH4(+), is necessary for acid survival of Helicobacter pylori.
Journal of bacteriology 192, 94-103 [PubMed:19854893]
[show Abstract]
Sakakura T, Kohno K (2009)
The synthesis of organic carbonates from carbon dioxide.
Chemical communications (Cambridge, England)1312-1330 [PubMed:19259576]
[show Abstract]
Mitteilungen der Ad-hoc-Arbeitsgruppe Innenraumrichtwerte der Innenraumlufthygiene-Kommission des Umweltbundesamtes und der Obersten Landesgesundheitsbehörden (2008)
[Health evaluation of carbon dioxide in indoor air].
Bundesgesundheitsblatt, Gesundheitsforschung, Gesundheitsschutz 51, 1358-1369 [PubMed:19043767]
[show Abstract]
Milton CC, Partridge L (2008)
Brief carbon dioxide exposure blocks heat hardening but not cold acclimation in Drosophila melanogaster.
Journal of insect physiology 54, 32-40 [PubMed:17884085]
[show Abstract]
De Rosa M, Gagliardi G, Rocco A, Somma R, De Natale P, De Natale G (2007)
Continuous in situ measurements of volcanic gases with a diode-laser-based spectrometer: CO2 and H2O concentration and soil degassing at Vulcano (Aeolian islands: Italy).
Geochemical transactions 8, 5 [PubMed:17448243]
[show Abstract]
Liang MC, Blake GA, Lewis BR, Yung YL (2007)
Oxygen isotopic composition of carbon dioxide in the middle atmosphere.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 104, 21-25 [PubMed:17190796]
[show Abstract]
Piao S, Friedlingstein P, Ciais P, de Noblet-Ducoudré N, Labat D, Zaehle S (2007)
Changes in climate and land use have a larger direct impact than rising CO2 on global river runoff trends.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 104, 15242-15247 [PubMed:17878298]
[show Abstract]
Wise RG, Ide K, Poulin MJ, Tracey I (2004)
Resting fluctuations in arterial carbon dioxide induce significant low frequency variations in BOLD signal.
NeuroImage 21, 1652-1664 [PubMed:15050588]
[show Abstract]
Nakahata K, Kinoshita H, Hirano Y, Kimoto Y, Iranami H, Hatano Y (2003)
Mild hypercapnia induces vasodilation via adenosine triphosphate-sensitive K+ channels in parenchymal microvessels of the rat cerebral cortex.
Anesthesiology 99, 1333-1339 [PubMed:14639145]
[show Abstract]
Kaiser CS, Römpp H, Schmidt PC (2001)
Pharmaceutical applications of supercritical carbon dioxide.
Die Pharmazie 56, 907-926 [PubMed:11802652]
[show Abstract]
Walle T, Walle UK, Halushka PV (2001)
Carbon dioxide is the major metabolite of quercetin in humans.
The Journal of nutrition 131, 2648-2652 [PubMed:11584085]
[show Abstract]
Anderson CT, Breen PH (2000)
Carbon dioxide kinetics and capnography during critical care.
Critical care (London, England) 4, 207-215 [PubMed:11094503]
[show Abstract]
Woodcock RC (2000)
CO2 measurements for IAQ analysis.
Occupational health & safety (Waco, Tex.) 69, 56-8, 60, 62 passim [PubMed:10826146]
[show Abstract]
Djurberg HG, Tjan GT, Al Moutaery KR (1998)
Enhanced catheter propagation with hypercapnia during superselective cerebral catherisation.
Neuroradiology 40, 466-468 [PubMed:9730350]
[show Abstract]
Kral TA, Brink KM, Miller SL, McKay CP (1998)
Hydrogen consumption by methanogens on the early Earth.
Origins of life and evolution of the biosphere : the journal of the International Society for the Study of the Origin of Life 28, 311-319 [PubMed:9611769]
[show Abstract]
Frantz SW, Beskitt JL, Grosse CM, Tallant MJ, Dietz FK, Ballantyne B (1996)
Pharmacokinetics of ethylene glycol. I. Plasma disposition after single intravenous, peroral, or percutaneous doses in female Sprague-Dawley rats and CD-1 mice.
Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals 24, 911-921 [PubMed:8869828]
[show Abstract]
Ellis MK, Naylor JL, Collins MA, Green T (1996)
Metabolism and disposition of difluoromethane (HFC32) in the mouse.
Human & experimental toxicology 15, 592-596 [PubMed:8818713]
[show Abstract]
Baudouin SV, Evans TW (1993)
Action of carbon dioxide on hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction in the rat lung: evidence against specific endothelium-derived relaxing factor-mediated vasodilation.
Critical care medicine 21, 740-746 [PubMed:8482095]
[show Abstract]
Beyer EM (1976)
A potent inhibitor of ethylene action in plants.
Plant physiology 58, 268-271 [PubMed:16659660]
[show Abstract]
Byers RE, Baker LR, Sell HM, Herner RC, Dilley DR (1972)
Ethylene: A Natural Regulator of Sex Expression of Cucumis melo L.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 69, 717-720 [PubMed:16591971]
[show Abstract]
Burg SP, Burg EA (1967)
Molecular requirements for the biological activity of ethylene.
Plant physiology 42, 144-152 [PubMed:16656478]
[show Abstract]
Last Modified
29 January 2018