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Figure 5.2 The synthesis and breakdown of polymers

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Presentation on theme: "Figure 5.2 The synthesis and breakdown of polymers"— Presentation transcript:

1 Figure 5.2 The synthesis and breakdown of polymers

2 How many waters would be produced?

3 Carbohydrates Sugars End in -ose CH2O
POLYMER, built of monosaccharide sugars

4 Classes of Saccharides
Monsaccharides Disaccharides Simple sugars Polysaccharides Complex sugars

5 Figure 5.3 The structure and classification of some monosaccharides

6 Figure 5.3x Hexose sugars Just because they have the same chemical formula does not mean they look the same. Different shapes = different functions Glucose Galactose

7 Figure 5.4 Linear and ring forms of glucose

8 Figure 5.5 Examples of disaccharide synthesis

9 Figure 5.5x Glucose monomer and disaccharides
Sucrose Maltose

10 Mono and Disaccharides
Primarily used for energy in the body.

11 Polysaccharides thousands of monosaccharides linked together
Storage and structural roles Glycogen, starch, cellulose, and chitin (contains nitrogen)

12 Figure 5.7a Starch and cellulose structures

13 Figure 5.7b,c Starch and cellulose structures

14 Figure 5.7x Starch and cellulose molecular models
 Glucose  Glucose Cellulose Starch

15 Figure 5.6 Storage polysaccharides

16 Figure 5.8 The arrangement of cellulose in plant cell walls

17 Fiber Largely undigestable –
Still important to your diet, helps promote contractions of intestinal lining.

18 Figure 5.x1 Cellulose digestion: termite and Trichonympha

19 Figure 5.x2 Cellulose digestion: cow

20 Chitin Low weight, high strength material.

21 Figure 5.9 Chitin, a structural polysaccharide: exoskeleton and surgical thread


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