- Sugar polymers
- Molecules contain C, H, O atoms
- H atoms are twice as many as C or O atoms (C6H12O6)
Monosaccharides 
- The simplest carbohydrates
 - They are sugar: C = 3 = triose C = 4 = tetrose C = 5 = pentose C = 6 = hexose
 - Examples of hexose sugars: glucose, fructose, galactose (C6H1206)
 - Molecules often have the form of a ring, made up of some C atoms and one O atom.
 
- Glucose molecules has 2 forms: α-glucose and β-glucose.
 
Disaccharides
- Different disaccharides can be formed by linking different monosaccharides. The bond that joins them together = glycosidic bond.
 
- Condensation reactions (dehydration): 2 monosaccharides covalently joined; H20 is formed.
 
- Hydrolysis reaction (splitting by water): disaccharides are split into 2 monosaccharides by breaking the glycosidic bond; a molecule of H20 is added.
 
Functions of monosaccharides and disaccharides
- Good sources of energy in living organisms, used in respiration for making ATP.
 - Transportable through the body because of the solubility: glucose is transported dissolved in blood plasma (animal), sucrose is transported in phloem sap (plant).
 - All monosaccharides and some disaccharides are reducing sugars (reduce blue Benedict's solution to produce an orange-red precipitate). Sucrose is a non-reducing sugar.
 
Syllabus 2015  
(b) describe the
  ring forms of α-glucose and β-glucose (candidates should be familiar with the
  terms monomer, polymer and
  macromolecule); 
 | 
 
Syllabus 2016  - 2018 
Carbohydrates and lipids Carbohydrates and lipids have important roles in the provision and storage of energy and for a variety of other functions such as providing barriers around cells: the phospholipid bilayer of all cell membranes and the cellulose cell walls of plant cells. a) describe the ring forms of α-glucose and β-glucose b) define the terms monomer, polymer, macromolecule, monosaccharide, disaccharide and polysaccharide  | 








No comments:
Post a Comment