Sucrose is formed from glucose and fructose.
Condensation!
reactants: fructose and glucose product: sucrose
a molecule of fructose and a molecule of glucose
Fructose and glucose are found in sucrose.
The disaccharide molecule, sucrose is not formed from two glucose molecules. Sucrose is formed from one glucose molecule and one fructose molecule.
When hydrolyzed, sucrose is change into glucose and fructose.
CONDENSATION
Yes, they do. Glucose and Fructose go through a condensation reaction to make sucrose (since H2O is taken out of the equation). Fructose and sucrose are isomers.
sucrose
water
Glucose and fructose are both six-carbon rings with hydroxyl (OH) groups bound to the carbons. To form sucrose one water molecule is released so the two monosaccharides can bind to one another.
sucrose + water = glucose + fructose is the chemical equation for the hydrolysis of sucrose into glucose and fructose.
reactants: fructose and glucose product: sucrose
This reaction is called hydrolysis.
You get the molecule of glucose and fructose from the molecule of sucrose.
A condensation reaction.
This reaction is called hydrolysis.
Yes. You can obtain fructose & Glucose by the breaking down of Sucrose. Sucrose is made from linked Fructose & Glucose.