What is the Sulfuric Acid and Sugar Reaction in Chemistry Demonstrations?

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The discussion centers on a chemical demonstration involving sulfuric acid and sugar (glucose or sucrose) that illustrates the rapid release of energy stored in sugar. Sulfuric acid acts as a strong dehydrating agent, extracting water from the sugar. The reaction for sucrose can be represented as C12H22O11 yielding 11H2O and 12C, where the sulfuric acid absorbs the released water and forms a hydrate. The resulting carbon is produced in a graphite form, showcasing the dramatic transformation of sugar into carbon through this acid-catalyzed reaction.
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Hi,

My chem teacher in high school did a demo 2-3 years ago, which I know involved sulfuric acid and either glucose or sucrose. I believe it was an acid-catalysed reaction which demonstrated the instant release of the energy stored in the sugar as opposed to conversion to ATP. Does anyone know what reaction this is, and how it is carried out?

Thanks
 
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This reaction can be performed with either glucose or surcrose (or almost any organic material for that matter). Sulfuric acid is a very strong dehydrating agent, that is, it has a strong affinity for water. It is such a strong dehydrating agent that it "sucks" out the water from the sugar.

The reaction with surcrose is C12H22O11 --> 11H2O + 12C
The sulfuric acid absorbs the water formed and forms a hydrate. The carbon created is in the form of graphite.
 
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