No, a C3 sugar is a sugar containing 3 carbons.
A trisaccharide is composed of 3 monosaccharide sugars.
Scientists also use the word saccharide to describe sugars. If there is only one sugar molecule, it is called a monosaccharide. If there are two, it is a disaccharide. If there are three, it is a trisaccharide. You get the idea.
Scientists also use the word saccharide to describe sugars. If there is only one sugar molecule, it is called a monosaccharide. If there are two, it is a disaccharide. If there are three, it is a trisaccharide. You get the idea.
Scientists also use the word saccharide to describe sugars. If there is only one sugar molecule, it is called a monosaccharide. If there are two, it is a disaccharide. If there are three, it is a trisaccharide. You get the idea.
Scientists also use the word saccharide to describe sugars. If there is only one sugar molecule, it is called a monosaccharide. If there are two, it is a disaccharide. If there are three, it is a trisaccharide. You get the idea.
Scientists also use the word saccharide to describe sugars. If there is only one sugar molecule, it is called a monosaccharide. If there are two, it is a disaccharide. If there are three, it is a trisaccharide. You get the idea.
You are probably referring to raffinose - a trisaccharide found in many fibrous vegetables. You can find more information online at: http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/topics/Raffinose
Same.
A carbohydrate containing three monosaccharide residues, e.g., raffinose.
A carbohydrate containing three monosaccharide residues, e.g., raffinose.
Three. Trisaccharide means three sugars. Disaccharide is two, monosaccharide is one.
Benedicts reagent tests for reducing sugars, so the question is, is raffinose a reducing sugar. Raffinose is a trisaccharide made up of glucose, fructose and galactose. It is not a reducing sugar because all of its anomeric carbons are bonded, so it will not react with benedicts reagent.
its a c3 plant nigg