What is another name for an aldose that contains 6 carbons in its chemical formula?
1 Answer
A hexose, which is generically a sugar that had six carbons in its straight-chained form.
Simply put, "ose" is the suffix for a sugar, and "hex" is the prefix for six.
A hexose originally has 6 carbons as a straight-chained molecule, and after being put into water, it rapidly interconverts in an equilibrium between its straight-chained form and its cyclic form.
An aldose (sugar with an aldehyde group on one end) put into water forms a cyclic hemiacetal, heavily favoring its cyclic form usually.
When it forms a ring, it has 5 carbons in the ring, 1 oxygen in the ring, and 1
For example, glucose does this mechanism in water due to water's autoionization to form the anomers
(The anomeric carbon is the carbon where the original aldehyde group was. The