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Yes. All types of sugars are. (Glucose, fructose, galactose)

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14y ago

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Related Questions

What is a monosaccahride?

monosaccaharides are single sugar units, containing carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen in a 1:2:1 ratio.


What are 2 sugars present in monosacchride?

A monosacchride is a simple sugar. Glucose (C6H12O6) is considered to be a monosaccahride. Two monosacchrides make a disacchride.


Is there sucrose in feces?

No, there is not sucrose in feces. This is because sucrose is only in food that is not digested.


Does a banana have sucrose or fructose?

Sucrose


How many Sucrose molecules in 3.0 moles of sucrose?

There are 1.81 x 10^24 sucrose molecules in 3.0 moles of sucrose.


What sugar is table sugar?

sucrose


What is the percent composition of sucrose?

Sucrose ~ 93.81%


How do make a percent sucrose solution?

To make a percent sucrose solution, dissolve a specific weight of sucrose in a specific volume of water. For example, to make a 10% sucrose solution, dissolve 10 grams of sucrose in 90 mL of water. The formula to calculate the amount of sucrose needed is: (percent sucrose/100) x volume of solution = weight of sucrose (in grams).


What is sucrose's electronegativity?

The electronegativity of sucrose is not determined by the sucrose molecule itself, but rather by the individual atoms that make up sucrose. Sucrose is composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms, each with their own electronegativity values. The overall electronegativity of sucrose is a weighted average of the electronegativities of these individual atoms.


What is the odor of sucrose?

Sucrose itself is odorless. Any perceived odor when handling sucrose is likely due to impurities or contaminants present in the sample.


How do ants locate sucrose?

Sucrose is a form of sugar that ants would be attracted to. An ant can locate sucrose by coming into physical contact with it.


Sucrose is soluble in water because the attractive forces between the solute particles are greater than the attractive forces between the solute and the solvent particles.?

You've got it in reverse. When sucrose dissolves in water, sucrose is the solute, and water is the solvent. In order to dissolve, sucrose molecules have to be more attracted to water molecules than they are to other sucrose molecules. If the attraction of sucrose to sucrose was greater than the attraction of sucrose to water, then there would be no reason for the solid sucrose to turn into the aqueous sucrose solution. Sucrose molecules would simply remain firmly attached to each other if that were the case.