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NotesBiology HLTopic 3.3From CO2 to biological molecules (carbon fixation into oils)
Back to Biology HL Topics
3.3.53 min read

From CO2 to biological molecules (carbon fixation into oils)

IB Biology • Unit 3

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Contents

  • From air to molecule — carbon fixation
  • Glucose — the hub, and the fates of fixed carbon
  • Exam-style question
The big idea: Every carbon atom in a plant — in its sugars, its starch, its cell walls and its oils — started out as carbon dioxide (CO₂) in the air.

In photosynthesis, a plant takes that CO₂ and locks its carbon into a biological molecule. This is called carbon fixation.

The first molecule built this way is glucose. From glucose, the plant can build everything else it needs — including energy-rich oils.

Photosynthesis fixes carbon dioxide from the air into glucose — the first biological molecule a plant makes from atmospheric carbon.

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Carbon fixation
The process of taking carbon dioxide (CO₂) from the air and building its carbon into an organic (biological) molecule. In plants this happens during photosynthesis.
Glucose
The first carbohydrate a plant makes from fixed carbon. It is the starting molecule from which other biological molecules are built.
Organic molecule
A molecule built around a skeleton of carbon atoms — for example a carbohydrate, a lipid or a protein.
Lipid (oil / fat)
An energy-storage molecule made from glycerol and fatty acids. Plant oils are lipids, often stored in seeds.
Why this matters: Carbon fixation is how carbon enters the living world.

Without it, the carbon in the air would never become part of a plant, an animal or you.

So the same CO₂ that a plant absorbs can end up as the oil in a sunflower seed — built, step by step, from atmospheric carbon.

A plant does not make glucose just to store it as glucose. Glucose is a hub molecule: once it has been made, the plant converts it into whatever else it needs.

Think of glucose as the raw material on a workbench. The same starting material can be turned into several very different finished products.

Glucose is the starting point: The carbon fixed from CO₂ is first built into glucose.

Glucose is then used to build all the other biological molecules of the plant:

starch (storage), cellulose (cell walls), amino acids and proteins (with added nitrogen), and lipids / oils (energy-dense storage).

Every one of these is made from carbon that began as atmospheric CO₂.

Glucose is the starting point: once made, the plant converts it into starch, cellulose, amino acids and lipids (oils). Every one of these molecules is built from carbon that began as CO₂.

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The fates of the fixed carbon: The glucose a plant makes can take several different fates. It can be:

respired (broken down to release energy), stored as starch, built into cellulose for cell walls, combined with nitrogen to make amino acids and proteins, or converted into lipids (oils) for energy-dense storage.
What the glucose is used forMolecule madeWhy the plant makes it
Broken down for energy(used in respiration)Releases energy to power the plant's cells
Joined into a storage carbohydrateStarchStores energy compactly and insolubly inside the plant
Joined into a structural carbohydrateCelluloseBuilds strong cell walls
Combined with nitrogenAmino acids → proteinsNeeds nitrogen (N) taken up from the soil as well as carbon
Converted to glycerol and fatty acids, then joinedLipids (oils / fats)Stores the most energy per gram — packed into seeds
Building oils — the pathway: To make an oil, the plant uses glucose in a short chain of steps:

glucose → glycerol and fatty acids → these join together (by condensation) → a lipid (oil).

The oil is then stored, very often in seeds, where its packed energy fuels the growth of the next plant.
StepWhat happensWhere the carbon comes from
1Carbon dioxide is absorbed from the air and fixed in photosynthesisAtmospheric CO₂
2The fixed carbon is used to make glucoseThe CO₂ just fixed
3Glucose is converted into glycerol and fatty acidsThe glucose made in step 2
4Glycerol and fatty acids join (by condensation) to form lipidsGlycerol + fatty acids from step 3
5The lipids (oils) are stored, often in seedsThe lipids made in step 4

Stored as starch (carbohydrate)

  • Made by joining glucose molecules together
  • A carbohydrate — contains C, H and O
  • A short-term, compact energy store
  • Common in stems, roots and tubers (e.g. potato)

Stored as oil (lipid)

  • Made from glycerol and fatty acids
  • A lipid — also built from C, H and O
  • Stores the most energy per gram of any food molecule
  • Common in seeds (e.g. sunflower, olive)
A memory hook: Air → glucose → everything. Carbon enters as CO₂, becomes glucose first, and glucose is the hub from which starch, cellulose, protein and oils are all built.

Oils need an extra conversion: glucose → glycerol + fatty acids → lipid.

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How this is tested: The classic version of this micro on Paper 2 is a 4-mark Outline: explain how a plant builds oils using carbon taken from the atmosphere.

Examiners want a clear chain of steps — each step is a separate scoring point. Start in the air (CO₂), fix the carbon in photosynthesis, make glucose, convert it to glycerol and fatty acids, and join those into a lipid.

Marks are lost by jumping straight from 'CO₂' to 'oil' with nothing in between, so name every intermediate.

IB-style question — outline how plants build oils from atmospheric carbon

Outline how a plant uses carbon taken from the atmosphere to build oils. [4]

How to score all four marks

  1. Fix the carbon. Carbon dioxide (CO₂) is absorbed from the air and fixed during photosynthesis.
  2. Make glucose. The fixed carbon is first used to make glucose.
  3. Convert the glucose. Glucose is converted into glycerol and fatty acids — the building blocks of a lipid.
  4. Join into a lipid. The glycerol and fatty acids are joined together (by condensation) to form a lipid (oil), which is then stored, often in seeds. (Award 1 mark for each distinct step, up to 4.)

Final answer

CO₂ from the air is fixed in photosynthesis; the fixed carbon makes glucose; glucose is converted to glycerol and fatty acids; these join to form a lipid (oil), stored in seeds.

✓ Why this scores full marks: Each sentence is a separate step in the pathway — fix carbon, make glucose, make glycerol and fatty acids, join them into a lipid.

A 4-mark 'Outline' needs four linked steps, not 'CO₂ becomes oil' written four ways. Naming the glucose and the glycerol + fatty acids intermediates is what secures the middle marks.
StepWhat happensWhere the carbon comes from
1Carbon dioxide is absorbed from the air and fixed in photosynthesisAtmospheric CO₂
2The fixed carbon is used to make glucoseThe CO₂ just fixed
3Glucose is converted into glycerol and fatty acidsThe glucose made in step 2
4Glycerol and fatty acids join (by condensation) to form lipidsGlycerol + fatty acids from step 3
5The lipids (oils) are stored, often in seedsThe lipids made in step 4

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the name of the molecule a plant builds first from the carbon it fixes in photosynthesis. [1 mark]

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