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By definition, one mole (one gram molecular weight) of any substance, contains Avogadro’s number of particles; atoms if you are discussing an element, or molecules if a compound. Avogadro’s number has been determined by several methods, all of the accepted values lie within a range of +-1% about the value of 6.022045 x 10^23/gm. That is a large number, in this case approximately; 602,204,500,000,000,000,000,000 molecules of glucose.

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The number of molecules in a mole of sugar would be 6.022 x [tex]10^2^3[/tex].

According to Avogadro, one mole of any substance contains  6.022 x [tex]10^2^3[/tex] number of molecules of atoms.

Since one mole is one mole irrespective of the substance, a mole of sugar will not in any way be different.

Thus, one mole of sugar will also have  6.022 x [tex]10^2^3[/tex] molecules or atoms of the same sugar.

More on molecules of substances can be found here: https://brainly.com/question/24411600?referrer=searchResults