|Acid from glucose |Gas from glucose |Lactose ferm. |Sucrose ferm. | |Test bacterium 1 |+ |+ |+ |+ | |Test bacterium 2 |+ |+ |+ |+ | |Test bacterium 3 |+ |- |- |- | |Test bacterium 4 |+ |+ |- |+ | |…
1. Prepare a 50% NaOH solution by dissolving 1.0 g NaOH in 1 mL of water.…
Acid production produces a color change from red to yellow, indicating the organism is capable of metabolizing the sugar in the tube…
After rehydrating the compound became a darker orange with some green colouring around the edges of the…
| with 1 drop of starch||Turned the slim yellow into a slight brown tint. Homogeneous|…
Objectives 1. To recognize the macroscopic properties of five chemical systems at equilibrium 2. To observe shifts in equilibrium concentrations as stresses are applied to the systems. 3. To observe a shift in equilibrium concentrations associated with changes in temperature.…
i. Add excess of 6 M HNO3 drops to a sample of your unknown until solution turns acidic. Use blue litmus paper to see when it turns red. Then add excess of .02 M AgNO3.…
The point of this lab is to determine if a substance contains carbohydrates such as a reducing sugar and/or polysaccharides. This will be done by using Benedict’s reagent and Iodine stain tests. Benedict’s reagent will react to reducing substances in the solution by oxidizing it and changing the structure of the reducing sugar to form a colored precipitate. The color of this precipitate can be used to determine the concentration of reducing sugars in the substance. If the precipitate is blue no reducing sugars are in the substance. If the precipitate is bluish green, green, yellow, or orange it does contain reducing sugars. Iodine stain will be used to determine if the solution contains polysaccharides.…
|The solution on the paper towel did not change in color even after exposure to bright light for 3 minutes.|…
Oxidation was found for primary alcohol. When 6 drops of potassium dichromate and 1 drop of concentrated sulfuric acid were added to 1-pentanol, the color of 1-pentaol turned into dark green. In second experiment, precipitation was found when 6 drops of 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine were added to both 5 drops of benzaldehyde and 5 drops of acetophenone. Based on these data, it is possible to find alcohol by oxidation and aldehyde by observing precipitation…
Benedicts solution is a chemical solution that changes color in the presence of glucose and…
* When the solution was added to the hot water bath, the solution went from blue, to green, to yellow, and finally to orange as time progressed. This was a positive result, meaning that the amylase in our saliva broke the polysaccharides in the cracker into mono- and di- saccharides. As a result, the Benedict’s reagent changed colour because it indicated the presence of mono- and di- saccharides in the solution.…
3. The student saw a colour change happen because the heat causes the biuret to chemically react with the protein. The reaction should change the colour of the mixture from blue to purple in appositive test for protein.…
Give at least two examples of chemical changes you observed. green changed form blue to…
By observing the table above, we could see that Benedict's test was for reducing sugars, iodine test was for the presence of starch, filter paper was for the presence of fatty acids, and the Biuret test was for amino groups present in proteins. Benedict's solution was used to test for the presence of simple sugars, such as glucose (monosaccharide). When heated, the solution mixed with monosaccharides produced a reddish-orange colour. This was because Benedict's solution is composed of sodium citrate, sodium carbonate, and cupric sulfate pentahydrate. When solution is heated, an oxidation-reduction reaction occurs: cupric ion (Cu+2) oxidizes into a cuprous ion (C+) and precipitates into cuprous oxide (Cu2O) because Benedict's solution loses an oxygen (Cu+2…