I'm not certain why you'd think there would be any. You said it was a glucose solution, so all those numbers are irrelevant to the mass of fructose.Even if we assume that was just a typo, "1.40 x 102 mL" is confusing.
I'll calculate what I can, and maybe you can use that as an example to figure out whatever it is you were really trying to ask.
A 102 mL sample of a 1.23 M solution (of whatever) contains 0.0829 moles of solute. For either glucose or fructose (the molecular formulas are the same, it's the way the atoms are arranged that's different) 1 mole is 180 grams. 0.0829 moles x 180 grams per mole = 14.9 grams.
A sample of pure glucose doesn't contain fructose.
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The chemical formula for glucose is C6H12O6.
Fructose or fruit Sugar (also levulose or laevulose) is a 6-carbon polyhydroxyketone. It is an isomer of glucose, meaning both have the same molecular formula (C6H12O6), but they differ structurally. Glucose is an aldehyde i.s.o. ketone.For structural formula cf. 'Related links'
Honey contains mostly Fructose and Glucose (with some other sugars and water). Fructose - C6H12O6 Glucose - C6H12O6
C6H12O6 is glucose or fructose, depending on how the atoms in the molecule are organized.
The molecular formula for Fructose is C6H12O6. This indicates that there are six carbon atoms, twelve hydrogen atoms, and six oxygen atoms.
The chemical formula for glucose is C6H12O6.
Fructose or fruit Sugar (also levulose or laevulose) is a 6-carbon polyhydroxyketone. It is an isomer of glucose, meaning both have the same molecular formula (C6H12O6), but they differ structurally. Glucose is an aldehyde i.s.o. ketone.For structural formula cf. 'Related links'
Honey contains mostly Fructose and Glucose (with some other sugars and water). Fructose - C6H12O6 Glucose - C6H12O6
Glucose = C6H12O6
C6H12O6 is fructose , glucose and galactose (They are isomers, which means that they have the same molecular formulae) C6H12O6 is fructose , glucose and galactose (They are isomers, which means that they have the same molecular formulae)
Glucose is C6H12O6 For your own curiosity; sucrose is C12H22O11 fructose is also C6H12O6 but it is structural isomer of glucose.
There are only three: glucose, fructose and galactose.
The actual chemical formula isn't different - both are C6H12O6. The only reason glucose and fructose are different is because the atoms are arranged differently. View the Related Links below to see the molecular arrangements of Fructose and Glucose.
C6H12O6 is glucose or fructose, depending on how the atoms in the molecule are organized.
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
No. Colloids are mixtures and so do not have chemical formulas. C6H12O6 is the formula for glucose or, alternatively, fructose, which are compounds.
The normal sugar is Sucrose, when it is dissolved in water it slowly decomposes to Glucose and Fructose. The reaction is catalised by acids (H+) like present in softdrinks.C12H22O11 + H2O --[H+]--> C6H12O6(Glucose) + C6H12O6(Fructose)