thegers91 Posted September 17, 2008 Posted September 17, 2008 Hi there, I have been given a project in school which is to research and compare the sugar content of cola, diet coke and coke zero. I'm struggling to come up with tecnique(s) which could be used for this project- a titration perhaps? I'm not sure. I believe this could potentially be an interesting project if the most straight-forward and effective techinique is used. Any help and advice would be greatly appreciated
hermanntrude Posted September 17, 2008 Posted September 17, 2008 you could read the nutrition information on the cans 1
iNow Posted September 17, 2008 Posted September 17, 2008 I thought that, too, but that only lists carbohydrates. My guess is that the teacher is looking for something more substantial than "21 grams carb."
big314mp Posted September 17, 2008 Posted September 17, 2008 It doesn't list the sugar content? I suppose you could do a density calculation, or calculate based on the calories....
Avalanche3319 Posted September 18, 2008 Posted September 18, 2008 I'm guessing a blood glucose meter would only measure the glucose form of sugar right? It probably wouldnt be able to measure the soda sugar (fructose?)
Gilded Posted September 18, 2008 Posted September 18, 2008 Titration with Benedict's reagent is probably the easiest method. I suppose you could also start with the premise that Diet and Zero do not contain any sugar.
CaptainPanic Posted September 19, 2008 Posted September 19, 2008 Better take normal tap water as your base line, and also test diet and zero coke.
jimmydasaint Posted September 19, 2008 Posted September 19, 2008 It would make sense to precipitate the reducing sugars in Coke with Benedicts including the monosaccharides and also some disaccharides as others have already mentioned. You could ask for access to a colorimeter to measure the percentage absorbance of the precipitate. You would then use a series of dilutions of a known concentration of glucose to compare to the precipitate from the Coke. Even if you did not have access to a colorimeter, you would still be able to weigh precipitates. I had better stop here in case I give too much away...Good luck.
hermanntrude Posted September 19, 2008 Posted September 19, 2008 I thought that, too, but that only lists carbohydrates. My guess is that the teacher is looking for something more substantial than "21 grams carb." i'd be prepared to bet that there are no complex carbs in coca cola. All the carbs are sugars I'm guessing a blood glucose meter would only measure the glucose form of sugar right? It probably wouldnt be able to measure the soda sugar (fructose?) they're also calibrated to work in very specialised conditions... at the very least, the pH would need to be controlled
big314mp Posted September 20, 2008 Posted September 20, 2008 they're also calibrated to work in very specialised conditions... at the very least, the pH would need to be controlled You could possibly calibrate by using reference solutions, in order to account for the differences between coke and blood.
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