- 5 Answer All Parts A To F Glycine And Valine Respectively Are Examples Of Naturally Occurring Amino Acid Molecul 1 (121.37 KiB) Viewed 43 times
5. Answer ALL parts (a) to (f). Glycine and valine, respectively, are examples of naturally occurring amino acid molecul
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5. Answer ALL parts (a) to (f). Glycine and valine, respectively, are examples of naturally occurring amino acid molecul
5. Answer ALL parts (a) to (f). Glycine and valine, respectively, are examples of naturally occurring amino acid molecules. H₂N-CH₂-COOH H₂N-CH(CH(CH3)2)-COOH glycine valine (a) Indicate the chiral centre of valine. Describe how measurements using a polarimeter can be used to distinguish between a sample of pure glycine and a sample of pure L-valine. [4%] (b) Draw the structures of the four possible dipeptides that may be formed when two molecules from a mixture of glycine and valine react together. [4%] (c) Draw the structures of glycine in aqueous solution at pH 2, pH 7 and pH 12, respectively. [3%] (d) Draw the repeating unit of the polymer that results from the condensation polymerisation reaction between the following monomers: HOOC–CH(C6H5)–COOH H2N-CH(CH3) NH2 dicarboxylic acid diamine [4%] (e) Name the general class of polymer to which the polymer formed in (d) belongs. [1%] (f) Draw the reaction profile (energy versus reaction progress) for a general uncatalysed chemical reaction passing through a single transition state. On the same diagram draw another reaction profile for a catalysed reaction. Comment on any differences between the two profiles. [4%]