Polymers and Crystals Background Info.

Monosaccharides are sugars in their simplest form. They are carbohydrate molecules which serve as building blocks for the more complex carbohydrates. Dietary monosaccharides include:

Glucose (sometimes called dextrose, grape sugar, and corn sugar) is the most prevalent monosaccharide. It is found in fruits, vegetables, honey, corn syrup, and molasses. It is a structural unit of all common dietary disaccharides and the basis for all polysaccharides.

Fructose (sometimes called levulose) is the second molecule used for sucrose. It is the sweetest of all the sugars and is found in honey, molasses, fruits, and vegetables.

Galactose does not occur in a free form in foods but is produced when lactose or milk sugar is digested, or when milk products are fermented.

Disaccharides contain two units of monosaccharide. Sucrose, more commonly known as table or regular sugar, is the most common one used. Sucrose is extracted from either beet or cane sugar. Sucrose is the crystalline form resulting when one molecule of glucose and one molecule of fructose combine to form sucrose and water. The chemical formula for producing sucrose illustrates how this formation of sugar takes place. (Glucose and fructose have the same chemical formula but differ in molecular structure.)

glucose + fructose = sucrose + water

C6H1206 + C6H1206 = C12H22011 + H20

The body uses sugar by reversing this process. It is called the hydrolysis of sugar. Lactose is hydrolyzed in the body by an enzyme lactase which breaks down the lactose into two monosaccharide-glucose and galactose. The galactose is then further broken down in the liver to form glucose. Glucose is used by the body for energy.

Polysaccharides or Polymers contain many molecules of monosaccharide. The main ones are:

Starch is the most abundant dietary carbohydrate and is reduced to sugar by digestive processes.

Dextrin are short glucose chains formed from starch.

Cellulose is the unique structural component used primarily by plants. Human bodies cannot digest cellulose.

Poly means many. Mer means parts. Polymer means many parts. Polymers are long chains of molecules. Polymers have a carbon nucleus with hydrogen cross bonded to them.

Man -Made Polymers

  • Plastic
  • Nylon
  • Grease

Natural Polymers

  • Cotton
  • Wool
  • Hair
  • Skin
  • Protein
  • Gelatin
  • Polysaccharides

Pure sugars (sucrose) are solid at room temperature and will liquefy or decompose when heated. The melting point is about 320 F (160 C). At that temperature, it forms a colorless liquid. With continued heating, it becomes yellow, and with additional heat, the color change progresses to brown and then to nearly black. This process is known as caramelization. It is a chemical process. Care must be taken not to let the process go too far otherwise a bitter, burnt flavor develops. Caramelized sugars can be used in many ways especially to produce color.

Sugar has gained a poor reputation in that too much of it will be stored in the body for emergency purposes. Some people will gain weight; develop diabetes, heart, or other diseases; or have poor teeth as a result of an improper sugar balance.

Sugar plays an important role in food preparation. It has several functions in food preparation and in the body:

  1. Used by the body for energy.
  1. Enhances food flavors.
  1. Promotes tenderness, fine texture, greater volume, and browning in baked products.
  1. Stabilizes egg white foam.
  1. Increases tenderness of starch-thickened gels, gelatin products, and egg dishes.
  1. Promotes production of carbon dioxide by yeast.
  1. Acts as a dehydrating agent in pectin gel formation.
  1. Lowers the freezing point of mixtures (ice cream).
  1. Increases the boiling point of mixtures (candy).

Sugar crops up as an added ingredient in such unlikely places as (among others) soda crackers, spaghetti sauce, soups, salad dressing, ketchup, table salts, and many medicines. Sugar also comes in many disguises. For example, the following (among others) are forms of sugar: honey, syrup, corn sugar, corn syrup, molasses, invert sugar, brown sugar, sucrose, fructose, glucose, dextrose, maltose, and lactose.

Sugar tastes good to most people. Bacteria that cause tooth decay love it too. When exposed to sugar, especially sucrose, the bacteria in the mouth thrive on it and form an acid that weakens tooth structure and forms decay.