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Chem 210 Module 4 WITH 100% RATED CORRECT REAL EXAM QUESTIONS AND CORRECT ANSWERS| GRADED A+ |2025 LATEST VERSION | 100% VERIFIED

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Chem 210 Module 4 WITH 100% RATED CORRECT REAL EXAM QUESTIONS AND CORRECT ANSWERS| GRADED A+ |2025 LATEST VERSION | 100% VERIFIED

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Chem 210 Module 4
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Chem 210 Module 4










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Institution
Chem 210 Module 4
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Chem 210 Module 4

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June 7, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
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Chem 210 Module 4 WITH 100% RATED CORRECT REAL EXAM QUESTIONS

AND CORRECT ANSWERS| GRADED A+ |2025 LATEST VERSION | 100%

VERIFIED



1. what is the most common organic molecule: glucose

2. why is glucose such a common organic molecule: it is versatile in its use in plants

animals and microorganisms

3. how is the bulk of glucose created: photosynthesis which converts co2 h2o into cellulose

starch and plant products

4. What is the chemical formula of glucose: C6H12O6

5. what is the general structural pattern of carbohydrates: CnH2nOn

6. What is another way to write the carbohydrate atom ratio: Cn(H2O)n

7. Due to this pattern during early experiments, we call glucose a

________________, or a carbohydrate: hydrate of carbon

8. what are additional terms used to describe carbohydrates: sugar monosaccharide

oligosaccharide polysaccharide

9. What does the term sugar mean in general conversation: sucrose and table sugar

10. What does the term sugar mean in scientific conversation: any carbohydrate molecule

11. where is the word saccharide derived from: Greek word for sugar

12. what in a monosaccharide: simple sugar or monomeric sugar




, 13. What is an oligosaccharide: short chains of monosaccharides joined together 14. what is

a polysaccharide: consist of large numbers of monosaccharides joined together in long chains by

O-glycosidic bonds

15. What are the functions of carbohydrates in organisms: 1.) energy source

2.) intermediates in metabolic pathways

3.) important to structure

16. what is an example of carbohydrates used as intermediates in metabolism: pentose

phosphate pathway, carbohydrate intermediates enable cells to produce

NADPH, which is used to control oxygen radicals

17. what is an example of carbohydrates used for structure: cellulose that is the basis of

cornstalks

chitin which is the base of insect shells basis of RNA DNA

18. what is aldose: monosaccharides with aldehyde group

19. what is ketose: monosaccharides with ketone group

20. what is an example of an aldose: D-glyceraldehyde

21. what is an example of a ketose: dihydroxyacetone

22. monosaccharides found in nature typically have how many carbons: 3-8 carbons

23. what are the smallest thee carbon trioses: glyceraldehyde and dihydroxyacetone

24 what is a Fischer projection formula: 2D structures representing 3D carbohydrates

25. who is the Fischer projection formula names after: Emil Fischer





, 26. What does the D- in saccharides mean: D three dimensional structure as supposed to L

structure

27. What is a D structure: dextrorotary right handed

28. What is a L structure: levorotary

Left handed

29. why is glucose known as dextrose in nature: in nature it is always in D form 30. The

two configurations for glucose and all other monosaccharides are determined by the

orientation of the OH group on the ___________ carbon.: penultimate

31. What is the penultimate carbon?: second to last carbon

32. Why do only D structures exist in natural systems: the activation site of enzymes that

produce glucose yield D configuration

33. What is an epimer?: 2 sugars that differ only in the configuration around 1 carbon

34. what are an example of epimers: D-glucose and D-mannose

35. what is a furanose ring: a five-membered sugar ring containing an oxygen atom

36. What are pyranose rings?: 6 atom rings

37. how did the carbohydrate rings get the oxygen component: when the alcohol group

reacted with another carbon to form a ring

38. What is a Haworth projection?: a structural model for drawing cyclic monosaccharides

39. What is an anomeric carbon?: carbon at which the OH is up or down (reacting carbon)

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