Syllabus Edition

First teaching 2020

Last exams 2024

|

Reducing & Non-Reducing Sugars (CIE AS Biology)

Revision Note

Lára

Author

Lára

Last updated

Reducing & Non-Reducing Sugars

  • Sugars can be classified as reducing or non-reducing; this classification is dependent on their ability to donate electrons
  • Reducing sugars can donate electrons (the carbonyl group becomes oxidised), the sugars become the reducing agent
    • Thus reducing sugars can be detected using the Benedict’s test as they reduce the soluble copper sulphate to insoluble brick-red copper oxide
    • Examples: glucose, fructose, maltose

  • Non-reducing sugars cannot donate electrons, therefore they cannot be oxidised
    • To be detected non-reducing sugars must first be hydrolysed to break the disaccharide into its two monosaccharides before a Benedict’s test can be carried out
    • Example: sucrose

OILRIG, downloadable IGCSE & GCSE Biology revision notes

The mnemonic to remember the definitions for oxidation and reduction

Examiner Tip

Become familiar with the OILRIG mnemonic to remember what happens to a molecule when electrons are lost from it (oxidation) or gained by it (reduction).

You've read 0 of your 5 free revision notes this week

Sign up now. It’s free!

Join the 100,000+ Students that ❤️ Save My Exams

the (exam) results speak for themselves:

Did this page help you?

Lára

Author: Lára

Expertise: Biology Lead

Lára graduated from Oxford University in Biological Sciences and has now been a science tutor working in the UK for several years. Lára has a particular interest in the area of infectious disease and epidemiology, and enjoys creating original educational materials that develop confidence and facilitate learning.