FoodTech Calc Food Technology What Are Carbohydrates?

What Are Carbohydrates?

Food Technology — Theory

Food Technology Theory

What Are Carbohydrates?

  • Produced by plants during photosynthesis
  • After eating plant foods, humans convert the carbohydrates into glucose
  • Glucose is the most abundant carbohydrate
  • Preferred source of energy for the blood, brain, and nervous system
  • Carbohydrate-rich plant foods make up the foundation of diets all over the world

Define - Carbohydrate chemically

  • Carbohydrates are organic compounds made up of carbon, hydrogen, & oxygen
  • Carbohydrates are polyhydroxy aldehydes(-CHO) or polyhydroxy ketones (-CO) and their derivatives
  • Commonly, the hydrogen & oxygen in the carbohydrates are present in 2:1 ratio as in water, from which the name carbohydrate (Carbon Hydrate) was derived. CHO are sometimes referred as saccharides meaning sugar.
  • Simple -CHO are called sugars
  • One of the simplest carbohydrates is glucose (C6H12O6) or monosaccharide & they link together to form more complex carbohydrates (oligo or polysaccharides)
  • The names of most -CHO are characterised by ending "OSE"   E.g., Glucose
SugarCommon Name
LactoseMilk Sugar — Glucose + Galactose
XyloseWood Sugar
MaltoseMalt Sugar
FructoseFruit Sugar
  • In animal organism the main sugar is glucose & storage CHO is glycogen,
  • In plant organism a wide variety of monosaccharides and oligosaccharides occur & the storage carbohydrate is starch
  • The structural polysaccharide of plant is cellulose
  • The gums are a group of polysaccharides obtained from plants, seaweeds and microorganisms

Did you know?

Carbohydrates are found on the surface of cells where they act as "road signs" allowing molecules to distinguish one cell from another. ABO blood markers found on red blood cells are made up of carbohydrates. They allow us to distinguish our body's blood type from a foreign blood type. Carbohydrates in our body prevent blood clots Ex.Heparin

Classification of Carbohydrates.

1.Based on number of carbohydrate units

  1. Monosaccharides cannot be broken down to smaller carbohydrates
  2. Disaccharides consist of two monosaccharide units joined together; they can be split into two monosaccharides. Sucrose (table sugar), can be broken down into glucose and fructose.
  3. Oligosaccharides contain anywhere from three to nine monosaccharide units. Raffinose, stachyose, ABO blood group are oligosaccharides.
  4. Polysaccharides are large molecules containing 10 or more monosaccharide units. Carbohydrate units are connected in one continuous chain or the chain can be branched.

2.Based on number of functional units

Monosaccharides that contain an aldehyde group are referred to as an aldose. It is at C-1. Those that contain a ketone group are referred to as a ketose. It is at C-2

Fig. Example for carbohydrate based on the functional group

Monosaccharides: Aldoses vs. Ketoses

Trioses: 3-Carbon Sugars (C3H6O3)
Aldose (Aldehyde)
COHCHOHCH
Glyceraldehyde
Ketose (Ketone)
CHCOCH
Dihydroxyacetone
Pentoses: 5-Carbon Sugars (C5H10O5)
Aldose
COCOHCOHCOHH
Ribose
Ketose
CCOCOHCOHH
Ribulose
Hexoses: 6-Carbon Sugars (C6H12O6)
Aldose
COCOHCHOCOHCOHCH
Glucose
Ketose
CCOCHOCOHCOHCH
Fructose

3.Based of Number of carbons

  • Three carbons: triose
  • Four carbons: tetrose
  • Five carbons: pentose
  • Six carbons: hexose
  • Seven carbons: heptose
Fig. Example for carbohydrate based on the carbon count
CHO H OH CH2OH glyceraldehyde (triose) CHO HO H H OH CH2OH threose (tetrose) CHO H OH H OH H OH CH2OH ribose (pentose) CHO H OH HO H H OH H OH CH2OH glucose (hexose)(aldohexose) CH2OH O HO H H OH H OH CH2OH fructose (hexose) (ketohexose)
Fig. Aldohexose and keto-pentose differ in the number of carbon atoms and in the type of carbonyl group they contain.
O
||
C
H
H
C
OH
H
C
OH
H
C
OH
H
C
OH
H
C
H
OH
An aldohexose
OH
H
C
H
C= O
HO
C
H
H
C
OH
H
C
H
OH
A ketopentose
Aldehyde
Ketone
Fig. Most common basic and complex carbohydrates in human diet.
--- config: layout: fixed --- flowchart TB Title["<center><b>The principal carbohydrates in the human diet</b></center>"] --- Food["Food carbohydrates"] Food --- Poly["Polysaccharides"] & Dex["Dextrins"] & Free["Free sugars"] Poly --- NSP["Non-starch polysaccharides"] & Starch["Starch"] NSP --- Cell["Cellulose"] & Hemi["Hemicelluloses"] Hemi --- Pectins["<b>Pectins:</b><br>Rhamnogalacturonans<br>Arabinogalactans"] & Xylans["<b>Xylans:</b><br>Xyloglucans<br>Galactomannans<br>β-Glucans"] & Gums["<b>Gums and mucilages:</b><br>Gum arabic, Tragacanth, Guar,<br>Locust bean, Alginic acid,<br>Carrageenan, Xanthan gum"] Starch --- Amy["Amylose<br>Amylopectin"] Free --- Mono["Monosaccharides"] & Alc["Sugar alcohols"] & Dis["Disaccharides"] & Oligo["Oligosaccharides"] Mono --- MonoL["Glucose, Fructose,<br>Mannose, Ribose,<br>Deoxyribose"] Alc --- AlcL["Sorbitol, Mannitol,<br>Dulcitol, Inositol"] Dis --- DisL["Sucrose, Lactose,<br>Maltose, Trehalose"] Oligo --- OligoL["Raffinose, Stachyose,<br>Verbascose, Fructans"] OligoL -.-> FructanNotes["<b>Fructans / FOS</b><br>Inulin: β2→1 fructan, α1→2 glucose<br>Levan: β-fructans"] Dex -.-> DexNotes["<b>Dextrin:</b> Oligopolysaccharide<br>α1→4, α1→6"] OtherNSP["<b>Other NSP:</b><br>1. Pullulan - Branched maltotriose<br>2. Dextrans - Branched glucan<br>α1→6, α1→3"] style Title fill:#90ee90,stroke:#333,stroke-width:2px style NSP fill:#ffffcc,stroke:#333 style Cell fill:#ffffcc,stroke:#333 style Hemi fill:#ffffcc,stroke:#333 style FructanNotes fill:#fff,stroke-dasharray: 5 5 style DexNotes fill:#fff,stroke-dasharray: 5 5