Firstly thank you to everyone who has posted answers :-)
I am sorry to say I am not yet clear on what happens to these electrons.
AWK thank you for the link, it gives a great explanation of why the ATP yield varies, but it doesn't seem to discuss the fate of the electrons transferred to NAD and FAD in their reduction- apart from stating that the electrons enter the respiratory chain (what I referred to as the electron transport chain). So we're left with the same problem- it looks like 24e
are being pumped into this chain- enough to produce 12 water molecules per glucose- not 6 water molecules that is required stoichiometrically. Sorry if I am missing something here- please do let me know if I am...
Babcock hall: I see two problems here- firstly as far as I can tell the NADs and FADs dont have a role in producing CO
2 but I have not examined the mechanism in detail (if they do I'd love to know as this could be the solution). The other problem is that you only need 12e
- to reduce 6O
2 molecules at the end of the ETC. Have a look at the balanced equation:
6O
2 + 12H
+ + 12e
- 6H
2O
So what happens to the other 12 electrons.