tested the blood glucose level of diabetic and non-diabetic people every 30 minutes starting from right before a meal was eaten up until two hours. I did this by measuring the amount of light absorbed by the solutions through a spectrophotometer. By doing so I found that for diabetics the maximum blood glucose increased more quickly than non-diabetics‚ which increased and decreased at a steady rate. With this information I was able to determine that the damaging effects of glucose molecules would
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correlation of percent change in weight for each sucrose concentration with AgNO3 added. The initial length of the potato cylinders were 2cm as depicted in table two. Graph two depicts the correlation of percent change in length in different sucrose concentrations. The initial weights for the solutions lacking AgNO3 ranged from 1.0-1.7grams (Table 3). Graph three displays the correlation for the percent change in weight for a solution lacking AgNO3 in different sucrose solutions. The initial lengths of the
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Examination of Proteus Vulgaris by Carbohydrate Fermentation Tests Abstract: Some bacteria ferment certain carbohydrates‚ while producing acidic or gaseous products; this information can be utilized in order to identify bacteria (Morello and Granato‚ 2003). In order to test for carbohydrate fermentation‚ tubed broths‚ containing a Durham tube for trapping any gas formed when the broth is incubated‚ are utilized (Morello and Granato‚ 2003). After incubation‚ a color change indicates that
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Khadijah Lockhart Biology Lab Report November 4‚ 2013 Title: Starch Digestion by Pancreatic Amylase Statement of the Problem: What happens to enzymes when they are boiled? If digestion doesn’t occur‚ which will be present starch or maltose? If digestion does occur‚ which will be present starch or maltose? Hypothesis: I predict that when enzymes are boiled‚ they will become larger. If digestion does not occur starch will be present‚ and if it does occur maltose will be present. Materials:
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Instructions: a) Formal writing assignment #2: The Peerless Starch Company of Blair‚ Indiana. b) Grading to be based on the CWE scoring rubric previously provided. c) Assignment must be placed on the online portfolio and must be submitted to etutoring for review. d) Read the case study below in its entirety and give it some serious thought. Then‚ in your own words‚ summarize the issues involved in this case (there are quite a few) and indicate whether Glen Baxter has a case and provide a thorough
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Corrugating Starch Adhesives Manual Corn Products International‚ Inc. Quality Policy on Products‚ Services and Customer Relations It is the policy of Corn Products International‚ Inc.‚ to provide products that not only meet applicable government quality and safety standards‚ but also seek to meet evolving customer expectations for quality‚ value and service; and to assure the accuracy and propriety of all labeling‚ advertising‚ and other representations we make concerning our products and services
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Respiration is the process by which energy is released energy from glucose in the presence of Oxygen‚ forming carbon dioxide and water as waste products. Glucose releases energy in a series of reactions that take place inside components of the cell. The stages are briefly explained below as were briefly explained in part A‚ the process then goes through‚ glycolosis‚ link reaction and then the Krebs cycle. The volume of CO2 that is produced in the Krebs cycle is important as this is the dependant
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THE EFFECT OF INHIBITORS AND MANIPULATION IN ENERGY PRODUCTION OF YEAST CELLS FOR GLYCOLYSIS AND FERMENTATION INTRODUCTION The aim of this experiment was to study the process of alcoholic fermentation in Saccharomyces cerevisiae (yeast cells) and measure the rate of Co2 production during anaerobic breakdown of the respiratory substrate‚ sucrose‚ in the yeast cells. The effects of an inhibitor on respiratory enzyme were also looked at. It is hypothesized that the five different reaction mixtures
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Introduction The purpose of this experiment is to determine the effect that temperature has on the growth and respiration of yeast fermentation. The growth and respiration of the yeast can be determined by using a glucose/ yeast solution mixed with water in flasks set at different temperatures. Yeast in order to produce‚ has to make energy‚ to carry out all cellular functions (Spicer‚ & Holbrook‚ 2007). The concept that aerobic metabolism of all yeasts‚ is determined by the relative sizes of the
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juice only. The amount of orange juice tested must be the same for every trial. A 1% starch solution must be used in every test tube. Identical iodine solutions must be used to test the starch solution. The temperature of the warm bath water must be exactly 37 degrees C. Materials: Eyedropper Appoximately1 Liter of orange juice 25 test tubes One test subject for swishing the juice 25- 1% starch solutions (95 mL) Warm bath with water heated to 37 degrees C Iodine Stopwatch Litmus
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