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प्रश्न
Enumerate the reactions of D-glucose which cannot be explained by its open chain structure.
उत्तर १
(1) Aldehydes give 2, 4-DNP test, Schiff’s test, and react with NaHSO4 to form the hydrogen sulphite addition product. However, glucose does not undergo these reactions.
(2) The pentaacetate of glucose does not react with hydroxylamine. This indicates that a free −CHO group is absent from glucose.
(3) Glucose exists in two crystalline forms − ∝ andβ. The ∝-form (m.p. = 419 K) crystallises from a concentrated solution of glucose at 303 K and the β-form (m.p = 423 K) crystallises from a hot and saturated aqueous solution at 371 K. This behaviour cannot be explained by the open chain structure of glucose.
उत्तर २
D (+) – glucose does not undergo certain characteristic reactions of aldehydes, e.g., glucose does not form NaHSO3 addition product.
Glucose reacts with NH2OH to form an oxime but glucose pentaacetate does not. This implies that the aldehydic group is absent in glucose pentaacetate.
D – (+) – glucose exists in two stereoisomeric forms, i.e., α -glucose and β-glucose.
Both α – D – glucose and β – D – glucose undergo mutarotation in aqueous solution. Although the crystalline forms of α- and β -D (+) – glucose are quite stable in aqueous solution but each form slowly changes into an equilibrium mixture of both.
D (+) – glucose forms two isomeric methyl glucosides. Aldehydes normally react with two moles of methanol per mole of the aldehyde to form an acetal but D (+) – glucose when treated with methanol in presence of dry HCl gas, reacts with only one mole of methanol per mole of glucose to form a mixture of two methyl D – glucosides i. e., methyl – α – D – glucoside (melting point 43 8 K, specific rotation +158°) and methyl – β – D – glucoside (melting point 308 K, specific rotation – 33°).
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संबंधित प्रश्न
Maltose is a
(a) Polysaccharide
(b) Disaccharide
(c) Trisaccharide
(d) Monosaccharide
What happens when glucose is treated with hydrogen cyanide?
What do you observe when glucose solution is heated with Tollen’s reagent?
Write the reactions involved when D-glucose is treated with the following reagent:
Br2 water
Acetylation of glucose yields ____________.
When glucose reacts with bromine water, the main product is ____________.
Glucose does not react with ____________.
The reaction of glucose with red P + HI is called ____________.
Which is the least stable form of glucose?
A solution of D-glucose in water rotates the plane polarised light ____________.
The number of chiral carbon atoms present in cyclic structure α-D(+) glucose:
The α-D glucose and β-D glucose differ from each other due to difference in carbon atom with respect to its ____________.
The number of chiral carbons in ß-D(+) glucose is ____________.
How will you distinguish 1° and 2° hydroxyl groups present in glucose? Explain with reactions.
Write the reactions of D-glucose which can’t be explained by its open-chain structure. How can cyclic structure of glucose explain these reactions?
Glucose with excess of phenyl hydrazine forms ______.
The number of asymmetric carbon atoms in the glucose molecule in open and cyclic form is ______.
When D-glucose reacts with HI, it forms ______.
Give the reaction of glucose with hydrogen cyanide. Presence of which group is confirmed by this reaction?