ThisIsDarwin Posted October 18, 2017 Posted October 18, 2017 Could a positive Benedict's test for glucose be possible without heating it if left for an extended period of time (72+hrs) at room temperature? Thanks!
jimmydasaint Posted October 29, 2017 Posted October 29, 2017 (edited) As the Benedict's Test is for monosaccharides and maltose ( a disaccharide), I would have thought that heat would be needed to thermodynamically favour the linear form of the sugar which is able to reduce the Cu++ ion in the Benedict's reagent to Cu+ causing the colour change from blue to brick-red. The mechanism seems to be as follows (with the sugar in the aldose form instead of the ring form and then oxidised into a carboxylic acid with the simultaneous reduction of Cu++ to Cu+)): http://laboratoryinfo.com/benedicts-test-principle-reagent-preparation-procedure-interpretation/ If it is true that heat is needed to open up the closed ring structure of monosaccharides, the reaction might not take place at room temperature. I am not sure about this point. Edited October 29, 2017 by jimmydasaint
John Cuthber Posted October 29, 2017 Posted October 29, 2017 It's also possible for things that are not glucose to give a positive result. I think vitamin C will reduce Benedict's solution.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now