Sucrose is a disaccharhide; each monomer unit consists of one molecule of glucose & one molecule of fructose (each of which have the same chemical formula of C6H12O6); they become joined together by a condensation reaction, meaning that one molecule of water (H20) is lost between them. The chemical formula for sucrose therefore becomes C6H22O11
It is a disaccharhide so it has two monomers; glucose and fructose.
The number of glucose monomers in a starch varies with the specific type of starch.
The prefix di- means two. A disaccharide is composed of two monomers.
Two monosaccharide molecules are needed to form one sucrose molecule because a sucrose molecule is a disaccharide and a disaccharide contains two times as many hydrogen atoms as oxygen atoms.
In what? The world? Probably glucose, which is the basic monomer unit used to make both starch and cellulose.
Saccharose, sucrose, table sugar.
sucrose
sucrose is a type of sugar, found in many types of candy. SO, if you are trick-or-treating on Halloween and get candy you are eating sucrose. Or, you can dress up as a sucrose molecule, C6H12O6. Tip: stick with marshmallows make great Hydrogen and Oxygen atoms
Amino acids are the basic monomer that forms polypeptides.
sucrose, fructose, lactose..etc
Monomer
Monosaccharides fructose and glucose make up the disaccharide sucrose.
which polymer is correctly matched with its monomer A}starch-glucose B}maltose-amino acids C}protein-fatty acids D}lipid-sucrose
sucrose
sucrose=glucose+fructose
SUCROSE= GLUCOSE+ FRUCTOSE by MALERIE
sucrose=glucose+fructose
glucose and fructose
monomers are basic building blocks that make up the big polymer. just like bricks make up a house
Amino acids are the basic monomer that forms polypeptides.
SUCROSE= GLUCOSE+ FRUCTOSE by MALERIE