Lactose (milk sugar) is a disaccharide comprising one glucose molecule linked to a galactose molecule by an β(1→4)-glycosidic linkage. Lactose has a beta acetal. Lactose is manufactured by the mammary gland and occurs only in milk (from 4 % to 7 %). Lactose intolerance is a common medical condition that results in diarrhea, abdominal pain, and flatulence and is caused by reduced or absent activity of enzyme lactase.
Like cellobiose and maltose, lactose is a reducing sugar. All reducing sugar undergo mutarotation in aqueous solution. The equilibrium mixture at 20 °C is composed of 62.7 % β-lactose (β-D-galactopyranosyl-(1→4)-β-D-glucopyranose) and 37.3 % α-lactose (β-D-galactopyranosyl-(1→4)-α-D-glucopyranose).
Latex, also known as rubber or natural latex, is a milky fluid derived from the rubber tree. The latex is a colloid of caoutchouc (25-35%) dispersed in water (60-75%), which forms rubber by coagulation. The term is also applied to artificial emulsions of natural or artificial rubber, or of certain synthetic resins (such as polyvinyl acetate or polyvinyl chloride). It is used in a wide variety of consumer products, including rubber gloves, tubing, condoms, rubber bands, etc.
Magnetic permeability (μ), also called permeability, is a constant of proportionality that exists between magnetic induction and magnetic field intensity. This constant is equal to approximately μo = 1.257×10-6 H/m in a vacuum.
Magnetic permeability is often expressed in relative, rather than in absolute, terms. If μ represents the permeability of the substance in question, then the relative permeability, μr, is given by:
Molecular shape is the three dimensional arrangement of atoms in space around a central atom. The molecular formula of a substance does not give an indication of its shape. For example, CO2 is a linear molecule, but SO2 is angular.
The three-dimensional shapes of many small molecules can be predicted by applying the valence shell electron pair repulsion theory (VSEPR). When atoms combine to form molecules, pairs of valence electrons arrange themselves as far from each other as possible. Another way to characterize molecular shape is in terms of hybrid orbitals.
Mutarotation is the change in optical rotation accompanying epimerization. In carbohydrate chemistry this term usually refers to epimerization at the hemiacetal carbon atom. In general α- and β-form are stable solids, but in solution they rapidly equilibrate. For example, D-glucose exists in an equilibrium mixture of 36 % α-D-glucopyranose and 64 % β-D-glucopyranose, with only a tiny fraction in the open-chain form. The equilibration occurs via the ring opening of the cyclic sugar at the anomeric center with the acyclic form as the intermediate. Mutarotation was discovered by French chemist Augustin-Pierre Dubrunfaut (1797-1881) in 1846.
Nernst’s division law states that a substance is divided between two solvents in a way that proportion of concentrations of that substance is at certain temperatures constant, under the condition that both solvents are in the same molecular state. Division coefficient is a proportion of substance concentration in solvents A i B at a defined temperature.
Appearance of division is used for substance extraction.
Nickel was discovered by Axel Fredrik Cronstedt (Sweden) in 1751. The origin of the name comes from the German word kupfernickel meaning Devil’s copper or St Nicholas’s (Old Nick’s) copper. It is hard, malleable, silvery-white metal. Soluble in acids, resist alkalis. It can be polished to a lustrous finish. Resists corrosion in air under normal conditions. Nickel is chiefly found in pentlandite [(Ni,Fe)9S8] ore. The metal is produced by heating the ore in a blast furnace which replaces the sulfur with oxygen. The oxides are then treated with an acid that reacts with the iron not the nickel. Used in electroplating and metal alloys because of its resistance to corrosion. Also in nickel-cadmium batteries, as a catalyst and for coins.
Noble gas refers to any element of the group of six elements in group 18 of the periodic table. They are helium (He), neon (Ne), argon (Ar), krypton (Kr), xenon (Xe), and radon (Rn). Unlike most elements, the noble gases are monoatomic. The atoms have stable configurations of electrons. Therefore, under normal conditions they do not form compounds with other elements.
They were generally called inert gases until about 1962 when xenon tetrafluoride, XeF4, was produced in the laboratory. This was the first report of a stable compound of a noble gas with another single element.
Oxo compounds are organic compounds that contain the karbonyl group, C=O. The term thus embraces aldehydes, carboxylic acids, ketones, amides, and esters.
pH is a convenient measure of the acid-base character of a solution, usually defined by
where c(H+) is the concentration of hydrogen ions in moles per litre. The more precise definition is in terms of activity rather than concentration.
A solution of pH 0 to 7 is acid, pH of 7 is neutral, pH over 7 to 14 is alkaline.
Generalic, Eni. "Agreement terms and conditions analysed." Croatian-English Chemistry Dictionary & Glossary. 29 June 2022. KTF-Split. {Date of access}. <https://glossary.periodni.com>.
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