yes
No, table sugar (sucrose) is not an Arrhenius acid. Arrhenius acids are substances that ionize in water to produce hydrogen ions (H+). Table sugar does not ionize in water and therefore does not act as an acid in this sense.
sugar is a acid when dipped or mixed in universal indicator...............
sugar, lots and lots of sugar
amino acid = "1000 grams sugar 250 grms fatty acid 500 gram water 100grmasodium hydroxide?"
Acid, sugar, water, CO2, and coalas
Sugar water is neutral. Sugar itself is neither acidic nor basic, and when dissolved in water, it does not significantly change the overall pH of the solution.
Yes it would make acid, thanks for asking
The sugar units have H and OH attached to carbon atoms and sulphuric acid is a strong dehydrating agent (water remover) so it eliminates water from sugar units leaving the pure carbon , as C6H12O6 = 6C +6H2O
because it turns into an acid
Pure soda water does not have sugar, only carbonic acid
because they contain the main constituent hydrogen
Citric acid is more soluble than salt and sugar because it has more polar groups that can interact with water molecules through hydrogen bonding, increasing its solubility. In contrast, salt and sugar have stronger ionic interactions that may not be as favorable for dissolution in water.