enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Glucose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glucose

    It indicates that the C-5 chiral centre has the same handedness as that of d-glyceraldehyde (which was so labelled because it is dextrorotatory). The fact that d-glucose is dextrorotatory is a combined effect of its four chiral centres, not just of C-5; some of the other d-aldohexoses are levorotatory.

  3. Monosaccharide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monosaccharide

    The number of distinct stereoisomers with the same diagram is bounded by 2 c, where c is the total number of chiral carbons. The Fischer projection is a systematic way of drawing the skeletal formula of an acyclic monosaccharide so that the handedness of each chiral carbon is well specified. Each stereoisomer of a simple open-chain ...

  4. Hexose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexose

    If the cycle has four carbon atoms (five in total), the form is called furanose after the compound tetrahydrofuran. [4] The conventional numbering of the carbons in the closed form is the same as in the open-chain form. If the sugar is an aldohexose, with the carbonyl in position 1, the reaction may involve the hydroxyl on carbon 4 or carbon 5 ...

  5. Chirality (chemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chirality_(chemistry)

    Chiral molecules will usually have a stereogenic element from which chirality arises. The most common type of stereogenic element is a stereogenic center, or stereocenter. In the case of organic compounds, stereocenters most frequently take the form of a carbon atom with four distinct (different) groups attached to it in a tetrahedral geometry.

  6. Asymmetric carbon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asymmetric_carbon

    In stereochemistry, an asymmetric carbon is a carbon atom that is bonded to four different types of atoms or groups of atoms. [1] [2] The four atoms and/or groups attached to the carbon atom can be arranged in space in two different ways that are mirror images of each other, and which lead to so-called left-handed and right-handed versions (stereoisomers) of the same molecule.

  7. Monosaccharide nomenclature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monosaccharide_nomenclature

    The carbons of the chain are conventionally numbered from 1 to n, starting from the end which is closest to the carbonyl. If the carbonyl is at the very beginning of the chain (carbon 1), the monosaccharide is said to be an aldose, otherwise it is a ketose. These names can be combined with the chain length prefix, as in aldohexose or ...

  8. Absolute configuration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_configuration

    are arranged around the chiral center carbon atom. With the hydrogen atom away from the viewer, if the arrangement of the CO→R→N groups around the carbon atom as center is counter-clockwise, then it is the L form. [14] If the arrangement is clockwise, it is the D form. As usual, if the molecule itself is oriented differently, for example ...

  9. Maltose - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maltose

    Glucose is a hexose: a monosaccharide containing six carbon atoms. The two glucose units are in the pyranose form and are joined by an O-glycosidic bond, with the first carbon (C 1) of the first glucose linked to the fourth carbon (C 4) of the second glucose, indicated as (1→4).