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sucrose is a unique chemical compound containing a glucose and fructose unit (both of which exhibit chirality) connected by an alpha/beta linkage. in nature all sugar units are comprised of dextrorotary molecules. As far as synthetic manufacture is concerned there are 4 potential anaolgues of sucrose consisting of :d-d glucose/fructose, L-D glucose/fructose, D-L glucose/fructose, and L-L glucose/fructose
If you mean sugar for coffee (like cane sugar), it's a disaccharide called sucrose, and it's made of glucose and fructose : β-D-fructofuranosyl-(2↔1)-α-D-glucopyranoside. If you mean "sugars" more globally, the basic unit is any molecule of the form Cn(H2O)n (hence the name "carbohydrates"). They are more precisely of the form HCO-(HCOH)n-CH2OH (aldoses, like the glucose or the ribose, which is found in the DNA) or CH2OH-CO-(HCOH)n-CH2OH (ketoses, like the fructose). Now most of encountered sugars in nature are of the form C5(H2O)5 (like the ribose), or C6(H2O)6 (like the glucose and the fructose).
nucleotide. a sugar (deoxyribose), a phosphate, a base. the bases can be adenosine, thiamine, cytosine, or guanine.
Monosaccharide
Monosaccharides: have a chemical formula of C6H12O6. -the basic unit of carbohydrates -the simplest form of sugar -Glucose, Galactose, Fructose Disaccharides: have the chemical formula C12H22O11, consist of two monosaccharides which are joined by the process of dehydration synthesis (during while a molecule of water is formed) -Maltose, Lactose, Sucrose Polysaccharides: polymers of carbohydrates, three or more monosaccharides joined together through the process of dehydration synthesis. -Cellulose, Glycogen, Starch
cheedar milk
It can be. Glucose is a monosaccharide so is composed of one unit. There are disaccharides and polysaccharides too, which are made up of 2 or more units. (There is also a group called oligsaccharides.) Fructose is a monosaccharide. Glucose + fructose = sucrose (a disaccharide). Try typing in monosaccharide, disaccharide, oligosaccharide and polysaccharide into Wikipedia.
sucrose is a unique chemical compound containing a glucose and fructose unit (both of which exhibit chirality) connected by an alpha/beta linkage. in nature all sugar units are comprised of dextrorotary molecules. As far as synthetic manufacture is concerned there are 4 potential anaolgues of sucrose consisting of :d-d glucose/fructose, L-D glucose/fructose, D-L glucose/fructose, and L-L glucose/fructose
Actually the glucose and fructose that make up suppose are the smallest.
a unit of sugar in carbihydrates is called monosaccharides. units of sugar (polymers) is called polysaccharides.
No. Sucrose is a disaccharide and is formed from two monosaccharides bonded by a glycosidic linkage. The two monomers or monosaccharides that form sucrose or table sugar are glucose and fructose.
A different between fructose and glucose is that fructose is much sweeter than glucose. Also fructose, when eaten and absorbed, releases its energy slower than glucose and can metabolize without the need of insulin.
Not exactly.Everyday sugar is sucrose, which is a disaccharide. That is a sugar which is made up of two sugar units: glucose and fructose. Glucose and fructose are monosaccharide sugars, which are the smallest unit of sugar. Glucose and fructose are both 6-carbon-sugars, or hexoses and have the same chemical formula, C6H12O6. But their molecular structures are different so that they have different properties: fructose is much sweeter than glucose.Sucrose is produced when one molecule each of glucose and fructose combine together in a condensation reaction, a process in which one molecule of water is removed.Thus glucose + fructose => sucrose + wateror C6H12O6 + C6H12O6 = C12H22O11 + H2O
Don't know about liquid sucrose.... but the specific heat capacity of sucrose is 0.30. This means that 0.30 calories of heat are required to raise the temperature of one gram of sucrose by one degree celsius.You sure you don't mean a sucrose solution... rather than liquid sucrose? Seems unlikely to have pure liquid sucrose, and very likely to have a water-based sucrose syrup solution. If that's the case, then it depends a great deal on the concentration of the solution itself.According to the pdf (link to the left of this answer), the specific heat of sucrose solutions is:40% sucrose sugar syrup: 0.6660% sucrose sugar syrup: 0.74However, note that it's in very strange units: Btu/lb . °F
A mineral is a naturally occurring substance that is solid and stable at room temperature, representable by a chemical formula, usually abiogenic, and has an ordered atomic structure- Definition from Wikipedia. Glucose and fructose are monosaccharide sugars. A monosaccharide is the smallest unit of sugar, mono meaning 1. Sucrose is commonly called table sugar and is a disaccharide. A disaccharide is a sugar that is made up of two sugar units, di meaning 2. Sucrose is produced as glucose and fructose are joined together by a condensation reaction. In the process a water molecule is eliminated. See the following equation. C6H12O6 + C6H12O6 => C12H22O11 + H2O glucose + fructose => sucrose + water This process does not occur spontaneously in nature. So we cannot define it as a mineral.
The term molecule is not adequate for sodium chloride; the recommended term is formula unit.
If you mean sugar for coffee (like cane sugar), it's a disaccharide called sucrose, and it's made of glucose and fructose : β-D-fructofuranosyl-(2↔1)-α-D-glucopyranoside. If you mean "sugars" more globally, the basic unit is any molecule of the form Cn(H2O)n (hence the name "carbohydrates"). They are more precisely of the form HCO-(HCOH)n-CH2OH (aldoses, like the glucose or the ribose, which is found in the DNA) or CH2OH-CO-(HCOH)n-CH2OH (ketoses, like the fructose). Now most of encountered sugars in nature are of the form C5(H2O)5 (like the ribose), or C6(H2O)6 (like the glucose and the fructose).