Monomers, Polymers & Carbohydrates Flashcards
Define monomer. Give some examples.
Smaller units that join together to form larger molecules.
- monosaccharides (glucose, fructose, galactose)
- amino acids
- nucleotides
Define polymer. Give some examples.
Molecules formed when many monomers join together.
- polysaccharides
- proteins
- DNA / RNA
What happens in a condensation reaction?
A chemical bond forms between 2 molecules and a molecule of water is produced.
What happens in a hydrolysis reaction?
A water molecule is used to break a chemical bond between 2 molecules.
Name the 3 hexose monosaccharides.
- glucose
- fructose
- galactose
All have the molecular formula C6H12O6
Name the type of bond formed when monosaccharides react.
(1,4 or 1,6) glycosidic bond
Name 3 disaccharides. Describe how they form.
Condensation reaction forms glycosidic bond between 2 monosaccharides
- maltose: glucose + glucose
- sucrose: glucose + fructose
- lactose: glucose + galactose
All have molecular formula C12H22O11
Describe the structure and functions of starch.
storage of a-glucose in plant cells
- insoluble = no osmotic effect of cells
- large = does not diffuse out of cells
made from amylose:
- 1,4 glycosidic bonds
- helix with intermolecular H-bonds = compact
made from amylopectin:
- 1,4 & 1,6 glycosidic bonds
- branched = many terminal ends for hydrolysis into glucose
Describe the structure and functions of glycogen.
main storage polymer of a-glucose in animal cells (but also found in plant cells)
- 1,4 & 1,6 glycosidic bonds
- branched = many terminal ends for hydrolysis
- insoluble = no osmotic effect & does not diffuse out of cells
- compact
Describe the structure and functions of cellulose.
polymer of B-glucose gives rigidity to plant cell walls (prevents bursting under turgor pressure, holds stem up)
- 1,4 glycosidic bonds
- straight, unbranched molecule
- alternate glucose molecules are rotated 180 degrees
- H-bond crosslinks between parallel strands form microfibrils + high tensile strength
Describe the Benedict’s test for reducing sugars.
- Add equal volume of Benedict’s reagent to a sample
- Heat the mixture in an electric water bath at 100 degrees for 5 mins
- Positive result: colour change from blue to brick-red precipitate
Describe the Benedict’s test for non-reducing sugars.
- Negative result: Benedict’s reagent remains blue
- Hydrolyse non-reducing sugars e.g. sucrose into their monomers by adding 1cm3 of HCl. Heat in a boiling water bath for 5 mins
- Neutralise mixture using sodium carbonate solution
- Proceed with Benedict’s test as usual
Describe the test for starch.
- Add iodine solution
- Positive result: colour change from orange to blue black
Outline how colourimetry could be used to give qualitative results for the presence of sugars and starch.
- Make standard solutions with known concentrations. Record absorbance or % transmission values.
- Plot calibration curve: absorbance or % transmission (y-axis), concentration (x-axis).
- Record absorbance or % transmission values of unknown samples. Use calibration curve to read off concentration.