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  2. Fehling's solution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fehling's_solution

    In organic chemistry, Fehling's solution is a chemical reagent used to differentiate between water-soluble carbohydrate and ketone (>C=O) functional groups, and as a test for reducing sugars and non-reducing sugars, supplementary to the Tollens' reagent test. The test was developed by German chemist Hermann von Fehling in 1849. [1]

  3. Reducing sugar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reducing_sugar

    Reducing form of glucose (the aldehyde group is on the far right) A reducing sugar is any sugar that is capable of acting as a reducing agent. [1] In an alkaline solution, a reducing sugar forms some aldehyde or ketone, which allows it to act as a reducing agent, for example in Benedict's reagent. In such a reaction, the sugar becomes a ...

  4. Glucose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glucose

    Due to mutarotation, glucose is always present to a small extent as an open-chain aldehyde. By adding the Fehling reagents (Fehling (I) solution and Fehling (II) solution), the aldehyde group is oxidized to a carboxylic acid, while the Cu 2+ tartrate complex is reduced to Cu + and forms a brick red precipitate (Cu 2 O).

  5. Benedict's reagent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benedict's_reagent

    Benedict's reagent (often called Benedict's qualitative solution or Benedict's solution) is a chemical reagent and complex mixture of sodium carbonate, sodium citrate, and copper(II) sulfate pentahydrate. [1] It is often used in place of Fehling's solution to detect the presence of reducing sugars and other reducing substances. [2]

  6. Aldonic acid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aldonic_acid

    Aldonic acids are the products of the oxidation of aldoses by Benedict's or Fehling's reagents. [7] Copper ions react with an aldose to form a red precipitate, Cu 2 O. The reaction scheme of an aldose being oxidized by the copper ions in a Benedict's reagent solution. The R group provided is an example of a sugar backbone.

  7. Degree Lintner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Degree_Lintner

    Maltose, the main sugar produced in mashing, is a disaccharide of glucose with one reducing equivalent (one reactive aldehyde group). One maltose will reduce two Cu 2+ in the Fehling reaction. The concentration of Cu 2+ in Fehling’s solution is 0.14 M, which is capable of oxidizing 0.070 M maltose. 5 mL of Fehling’s solution can oxidize 0. ...

  8. Celebrity Faces Show Alarming Effects Of Ozempic Use As ...

    www.aol.com/hollywood-faces-ozempic-face-crisis...

    It can be used on its own or in addition to other diabetes medications, such as metformin, sulphonylureas, or insulin. Celebrity Faces Show Alarming Effects Of Ozempic Use As Hollywood Grapples ...

  9. Nylander's test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nylander's_test

    Nylander's test is a chemical test used for detecting the presence of reducing sugars. Glucose or fructose reduces bismuth oxynitrate to bismuth under alkaline conditions. When Nylander's reagent, which consists of bismuth nitrate, potassium sodium tartrate and potassium hydroxide, is added to a solution with reducing sugars, a black precipitate of metallic bismuth is formed.