The key idea
Respiration transfers energy from glucose. Aerobic respiration uses oxygen; anaerobic respiration releases less energy.
The bit that matters
Learn the process in clean chunks. If a sentence explains a cause, make sure you can say the effect too.
Aerobic respiration
Aerobic respiration uses oxygen to release energy from glucose and is an exothermic reaction occurring continuously in the mitochondria of living cells.The word equation is glucose + oxygen produces carbon dioxide + water.It releases far more energy per glucose molecule than anaerobic respiration because the glucose is completely broken down.
Anaerobic respiration
Anaerobic respiration takes place without oxygen and releases much less energy because glucose is not fully broken down.In muscle cells glucose is converted to lactic acid.In yeast and plant cells anaerobic respiration is called fermentation and produces ethanol and carbon dioxide, which is used in brewing and baking.
Uses of energy from respiration
The energy released by respiration is used for muscle contraction, for building larger molecules from smaller ones such as proteins from amino acids, and to keep warm in mammals and birds.Metabolism is the sum of all the reactions in a cell or body, and respiration supplies the energy that drives these reactions.
Oxygen debt and recovery
During hard exercise muscles respire anaerobically, producing lactic acid that causes muscle fatigue.The oxygen debt is the amount of extra oxygen the body needs after exercise to react with the accumulated lactic acid and remove it.Blood transports the lactic acid to the liver, where it is converted back into glucose.
Definitions to learn
Respiration
The exothermic process that releases energy from glucose in every living cell.
Aerobic respiration
Respiration using oxygen that fully breaks down glucose to carbon dioxide and water.
Anaerobic respiration
Respiration without oxygen that releases less energy and produces lactic acid in muscles.
Fermentation
Anaerobic respiration in yeast that produces ethanol and carbon dioxide.
Metabolism
The sum of all the chemical reactions taking place in a cell or the body.
Oxygen debt
The extra oxygen needed after exercise to remove the lactic acid that built up.
Compare aerobic respiration with anaerobic respiration in human muscle.
Both release energy from glucose.
Aerobic respiration uses oxygen and produces carbon dioxide and water.
Anaerobic respiration does not use oxygen and produces lactic acid.
Anaerobic respiration releases less energy and produces lactic acid.
Distinguish aerobic from anaerobic in every answer. Anaerobic in animals: lactic acid.In yeast and plants: ethanol and CO₂. Never confuse the two products.Always write 'respiration releases energy' — it does not produce it.
Respiration releases energy. Energy is not created.
How to score full marks
- 1State clearly that respiration is exothermic and happens in all living cells, not only during exercise.
- 2For anaerobic respiration give the correct product for the organism: lactic acid in muscle, ethanol and carbon dioxide in yeast.
- 3Do not confuse respiration with breathing; respiration is a chemical reaction in cells.
Try these yourself
Open each answer only after you have explained the full biological process.
1Write the word equation for aerobic respiration.
- 1.Include oxygen as a reactant.
2Why can vigorous exercise cause an oxygen debt?
- 1.Link anaerobic respiration to lactic acid.
3Where in a cell does aerobic respiration occur?
- 1.Recall the organelle.
4Write the word equation for aerobic respiration.[1 mark]
- 1.Reactants on the left, products on the right.
5Name the products of anaerobic respiration in muscle cells.[1 mark]
- 1.Recall the muscle product, not the yeast product.
6State two uses of the energy released during respiration.[2 marks]
- 1.Think about movement, building molecules and temperature.
7Explain why anaerobic respiration releases less energy than aerobic respiration.[3 marks]
- 1.Compare how fully glucose is broken down.
8A sprinter feels tired and their muscles ache after a 200 metre race. Explain in terms of respiration why this happens and how the body recovers.[4 marks]
- 1.Explain the switch to anaerobic respiration.
- 2.Explain oxygen debt and lactic acid removal.
9Name the organelle in which aerobic respiration takes place.[1 mark]
- 1.Recall the site of aerobic respiration.
10State the word equation for anaerobic respiration in yeast.[1 mark]
- 1.Recall the two products of fermentation.
11Explain why bread dough rises when yeast is added and then collapses when baked in an oven.[4 marks]
- 1.Link yeast fermentation to gas production.
- 2.Explain what heat does.
12A student measures the volume of carbon dioxide produced by yeast in glucose solution at 20°C and 35°C. Predict and explain the difference in results.[4 marks]
- 1.Apply enzyme rate theory to respiration.
- 2.Link to increased collision frequency.
13Explain why cells in actively contracting muscles have more mitochondria than resting cells.[4 marks]
- 1.Link muscle contraction to energy demand.
- 2.Connect energy to aerobic respiration in mitochondria.
14Compare aerobic and anaerobic respiration in human muscle cells in terms of reactants, products and the amount of energy transferred.[6 marks]
- 1.Produce a direct comparison using a structured approach.