Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates are the organic compounds that are obtained in foods and living matters in the shape of sugars, cellulose, and starch. The general formula of carbohydrates is Cn(H2O)2. The ratio of H and O present in carbohydrates is identical to water.
Starch
Starch is a polysaccharide carbohydrate that belongs to the category of polysaccharide carbohydrates.
Mutarotation
The rotation of a particular structure of the chiral compound because of the epimerization is called mutarotation. It is the repercussion of the ring chain tautomerism. In terms of glucose, this can be defined as the modification in the equilibrium of the α- and β- glucose anomers upon its dissolution in the solvent water. This process is usually seen in the chemistry of carbohydrates.
L Sugar
A chemical compound that is represented with a molecular formula C6H12O6 is called L-(-) sugar. At the carbon’s 5th position, the hydroxyl group is placed to the compound’s left and therefore the sugar is represented as L(-)-sugar. It is capable of rotating the polarized light’s plane in the direction anticlockwise. L isomers are one of the 2 isomers formed by the configurational stereochemistry of the carbohydrates.
Predict the products formed in the E2 reaction below. Use the Zaitsev rule to determine the major product.
![The image shows a chemical reaction diagram on lined paper. The diagram depicts a cyclopentane ring with a wedge line coming off one vertex, which is a representation of a chlorine (Cl) atom.
The arrow pointing to the right indicates the reaction's progression and is labeled with "NaOH," representing sodium hydroxide as a reactant. This suggests a nucleophilic substitution reaction where NaOH is likely used to replace the chlorine atom with a hydroxyl group (-OH), converting the compound into an alcohol.
This type of reaction is common in organic chemistry where an alkyl halide is converted into an alcohol. The structure and notation exemplify the stereochemistry and orientation, with the wedge indicating that the chlorine atom is leaving the plane of the ring.](/v2/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcontent.bartleby.com%2Fqna-images%2Fquestion%2F9991ebe6-d311-4747-8b3e-049d34946ced%2F793b0b84-f893-4760-ad04-0ca2c07e2d26%2Fxxze1eg_processed.jpeg&w=3840&q=75)
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