Sugars are monosaccharides that cannot be hydrolyzed to simple sugar substances and are ketonic or aldehydic substitution products of polyhydric alcohols.
Pentoses are C5H10O5, including xylose, ribose, arabinose, and rhamnose, which occur in nature usually as products of hydrolysis of hemicellulose, gums and mucilages.
Hexoses are glucose, galactose, mannose, and fructose, which are the most important monosaccharides found in plants and are the first detectable sugars synthesized by plants.
The production of monosaccharides by photosynthesis is a biologic process that converts electromagnetic energy into chemical energy, consisting of two classes of reactions: light reaction that actually convert electromagnetic energy into chemical energy and enzymatic reaction that utilizes the energy from the light reaction to fix carbon dioxide into sugar (dark reactions).
Starch, a polysaccharide, has a botanical origin in Zea mays, Graminae (matured grain of corn), Triticum aestivum (wheat), and Solanum tuberosum, Solaneceae (potato tubers).
Starch is a linear molecule composed of 250 to 300 D - glucopyranose units uniformly linked by alpha 1,4 glucosidic bonds, is soluble in water, contains 25% in starch, and has a deep blue complex when reacted with iodine.
Mannitol (D - mannitol) is a hexahydric alcohol obtained by reduction of mannose or by isolation from Manna, a dried saccharine exudates of Fraxinus ornus, Oleaceae, containing 50 to 60% of mannitol.
Sorbitol (D - glucitol) is a hexitol obtained from the ripe berries of mountain ash, Sorbus aucuparia, Rosaceae, known as a well known hexahydric sugar alcohol.
DEXTRAN is a botanical product obtained from Leuconostoc mesenteroides, a 1,6 - linked polyglucan formed from sucrose by the action of a transglucosylase enzyme (dextran sucrase).
Sodium Starch glycolate is a semisynthetic material, the sodium salt of a carboxymethyl ether of starch, and is used as a disintegration agent in tablet formulation.
Heteroglycans are natural plant hydrocolloids that may be classified as anionic or nonionic polysaccharides or salt of polysaccharides, translucent, amorphous substances that are produced frequently in high plants as a protective after injury.
Cellulose is the most abundant organic compound on earth, the chief polysaccharide of plant cell walls, and is purified from Cotton, also referred to as absorbent cotton, which is employed as a surgical dressing.
Dextrose, also known as blood sugar, D-glucose, and alpha-D (+) – glucopyranose, is produced by grapes and is a product of hydrolysis of starch or the product of hydrolysis of sucrose.
Citric Acid, also known as 2-hydroxy 1,2,3, propane trioic acid, was isolated in crystal form from lemon juice by Scheele in 1784, and is commercially available from lemons, limes or pineapple but mostly by fermentation of sucrose.