NO!
Glucose solution is a homogeneous mixture because it is composed of glucose dissolved in water, making it uniform throughout.
Glucose is a compound.
mixture because humans turn it into something else
Yes, a glucose solution is a homogeneous mixture because glucose particles are uniformly distributed throughout the solvent, usually water. This means that the composition and properties of the solution are the same throughout.
It is a solution. And a solution is homogeneous.
Cellulose can be separated from a mixture of glucose, starch, and cellulose through a process called filtration. Cellulose is insoluble in water, while glucose and starch are soluble. By mixing the mixture with water and filtering it, the cellulose will be left behind on the filter paper, while the glucose and starch pass through as a solution.
In an equimolar mixture of alpha-D-glucose and beta-D-glucose, the percentage of alpha form would be 50% and the percentage of beta form would also be 50%.
yes. this is because the glucose is the reducing sugar, it will participate in the Maillard reaction
Yes; the solution called "Ringer's Lactate" is a mixture containing water, essential salts and electrolytes, and glucose.
Because it is made primarily of water, glucose and fructose
Lactose is a pure substance. It is a disaccharide sugar composed of glucose and galactose.
Glucose is a mixture that the leaf makes called photosynthesis |Glucose's formula is C6 H12 06| Hope this helps!