Science, asked by Anonymous, 11 months ago

Sucrose undergoes hydrolysis or not...?​

Answers

Answered by dishaa85
0

Answer:

sucrose does not undergo reactions that are typical of aldehydes and ketones. Therefore, sucrose is a nonreducing sugar. The hydrolysis of sucrose in dilute acid or through the action of the enzyme sucrase (also known as invertase) gives an equimolar mixture of glucose and fructose.

Answered by joanlucy008
0

Answer:Sucrose. ... In addition, sucrose does not undergo reactions that are typical of aldehydes and ketones. Therefore, sucrose is a nonreducing sugar. The hydrolysis of sucrose in dilute acid or through the action of the enzyme sucrase (also known as invertase) gives an equimolar mixture of glucose and fructose  

Explanation:

Hydrolysis of Sucrose. In the hydrolysis of any di- or poly saccharide, a water molecule helps to break the acetal bond as shown in red. The acetal bond is broken, the H from the water is added to the oxygen on the glucose. The -OH is then added to the carbon on the fructose.This result because the the formation reaction of the disaccharide is between the hemiacetal of glucose and the hemiketal of the fructose. Invert Sugar: When sucrose is hydrolyzed it forms a 1:1 mixture of glucose and fructose. This mixture is the main ingredient in honey.

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