In general, in the fermentation lab the more gas produced showed the level of fermentation, the food source that produced the most CO2 the fastest during the fermentation process was the sample of 0.2 M glucose at 37°C topping of at 9.2ml of CO2 produced in 40 minutes total (see Table 2). This sums up the most optimal conditions for cell fermentation was a simple monosaccharaide, glucose, and at temperature of around 37 C which is the temperature of the human body. The hypothesis was correct a simple sugar easily broken down and higher temperatures are optimal. These results showed that the simpler the sugar the better it is for breaking it down. Sucrose is a disaccharide and starch is a polysaccharide. The hardest to break down was starch. This is possible due to …show more content…
Sample 3 had the highest of the transmittance % readings out of samples 1-4 over time lapse of 40 minutes. (See table 3) Also the initial reaction rate for this sample was also the highest compared to the rest. The rates of the reactions in this procedure were the indicators of how succinate affects the process of mitochondrial respiration. Succinate increases the rate of ATP production by directly affecting cell respiration (Yang, J, Wang, et al 2014.) The highest rate of reaction was sample 3 which also had the highest volume of succinate. Sample 2 was after which had the second highest volume of succinate in it. The sample without succinate, sample 1, showed steady low results through all 30 minutes. The sample without mitochondria, but with succinate, sample 4, also had a similar result. This connection demonstrated that succinate is necessary for the cellular respiration to occur, also mitochondrial are respiring. DPIP would no have been able to be reduced with out it. Succinate is being oxidized during this reaction. Oxidation is when a compound loses electrons and reduction is when a compound gains
From our data, the main interpretation that can be observed is that in Trial 3, where 2 mL of yeast was used, the rate of reaction was the greatest. This means that the enzyme activity is the greatest where the highest concentration of enzyme was used which supports my hypothesis. As the concentration of the enzyme used increases, the enzyme activity also increases. The trial with the least amount of enzyme concentration (only 0.5 mL yeast used) had a rate of reaction value of 0.667 mL/second while the control (1 mL of yeast used) had 0.733 mL/second and the trial with the greatest concentration of enzyme (2 mL of yeast used) had a rate of reaction value of 1.07 mL/second. This difference was significant enough to be able to conclude that increasing
There are many substances that can be manipulated and cause the rate of reaction in fermentation to either speed up or slow down. Substances that alter the rate of the reaction could be temperature of the water, the yeast concentration, pH, and the glucose concentration. In the experimental group of the experiment the amount of yeast concentration was manipulated. The objective of this experiment was to determine what factors affect the rate of the fermentation. To test this objective we changed the amount of yeast being used. A higher yeast concentration replaced the controlled yeast amount. A prediction made by my group was that higher amount of yeast would speed up the process of fermentation. Our null hypothesis is there will be no
During this experiment, sugar sources were varied and respiration rate evaluated. To begin, a water bath was set at 30 degrees Celsius. This creates an optimum temperature for the enzymes in yeast to breakdown sugar and give off CO₂. Each sugar source, glucose, sucrose, lactose and glycerol were all added to its own unique yeast sample, one at a time. Each sugar source that was added to the yeast solution was immediately incubated for 10 min, then was transferred to a respiration chamber. The CO₂ sensor was put in, recording the CO₂ respiration for 4 min. This process was done for each sugar source. The reparation rate was recorded through Logger Pro. After 4 min passed, the slope was recorded, resulting in respiration rate.
The mole is a convenient unit for analyzing chemical reactions. Avogadro’s number is equal to the mole. The mass of a mole of any compound or element is the mass in grams that corresponds to the molecular formula, also known as the atomic mass. In this experiment, you will observe the reaction of iron nails with a solution of copper (II) chloride and determine the number of moles involved in the reaction. You will determine the number of moles of copper produced in the reaction of iron and copper (II) chloride, determine the number of moles of iron used up in the reaction of iron and copper (II) chloride, determine the ratio of moles of iron to moles of copper, and determine the number of atoms and formula units involved in
In this lab we tried to find what fuels yeast could metabolize and what the yields of the carbon dioxide gas that were produced from the different sugars used. We used 6 different yeast and sugar mixtures. The different yeast and sugar mixtures we used were control, glucose, sucrose, fructose, starch, and saccharin. The results for the 6 different results are presented in Tables 1-6 and Graph 1. Graph 1 is a graph of all the information in Tables 1-6. Each Table and graph is labeled approximately.
Cellular respiration is the series of metabolic process by which living cells produce energy through the oxidation of organic substances. Cellular respiration takes place in the mitochondria. Fermentation is the process by which complex organic compounds such as glucose, are broken down by the action of enzymes into simpler compounds without the use of oxygen. The significance of these pathways for organisms is to allow for an organism to be able to generate ATP. Some organism that undergo cellular respiration are bacteria and fungi. Some organism that undergo fermentation are yeast and muscle cells. In cellular respiration, glucose is oxidized and releases energy. In cellular respiration, glucose produces ATP and 3-carbon molecules of pyruvate. The pyruvate is then further broken down in the mitochondria where it becomes oxidized and releases CO2 (Upadhyaya 2014). In the fermentation process oxygen does not play a part. This process converts glucose into pyruvate and produces ATP. From there pyruvate breaks down into CO2 and acetaldehyde (Upadhyaya 2014) Monosaccharides are known as simple sugars and their main function is being the source of energy for organisms. Disaccharides are two monosaccharides joined by a covalent bond and their primary function is to provide food to monosaccharides. Some disaccharides
4. Fructose is component of sucrose, normal table sugar, along with glucose. Whereas glucose is able to immediately enter into glycolysis, fructose is not. Fructose is broken down via fructokinase into fructose- 1-phosphate. Fructose – 1-phospate then gets converted into DHAP+ glyceraldehyde via aldolase B. DHAP+ glyceraldehyde is used in glycolysis to produce pyruvate that goes into the citric acid cycle to produce ATP
In this activity two sets of experiments are performed to determine the rate of cellular respiration by measuring the amount of CO2 in fermentation tube. Larger the rate of cellular respiration, larger will be the amount of gas produced. To conduct the experiment yeast and water were added together at first. Yeast mixture was poured into the test tube and another test tube on the top. After flipping the tube upside down the amount of gas produced was observed at the top of Tube for about 10 minutes to determine the Cellular Respiration Rate.
Abstract: This lab’s purpose was to see how different levels of yeast, distilled water, and sugar interact to affect the level of carbon dioxide evolved in fermentation. In this experiment we had two sections. The first section tested four test tubes with varying levels of yeast, glucose and distilled water for evolved carbon dioxide levels. The tubes were timed for 20 minutes. The amounts of solution in the test tubes are noted in the methods section of this lab report. The second section of the lab used three test tubes and flowed the same procedure except added spices. The levels of ingredients are also in the methods section. The main goal of this experiment was to see the effects of yeast concentration.
PH can affect the way fermentation occurs due to the irregularity of the acidity or alkalinity within the glucose solution. This is an enzyme-based reaction that is susceptible to pH. The aim of this experiment was to determine how pH affects the yeast fermentation rate by performing the experiment numerous times with a different pH of glucose solution which included pH 3, 5, 7, 9, 11. The hypothesis was ‘If the pH is lower than the neutral point then the fermentation reaction will occur faster?’ The experiment conducted was to measure the amount of C02 produced by the yeast going into fermentation, however varying the pH of glucose solution by using different pHs . To test this every 5 minutes the volume of gas in the test tube was observed and recorded until a period of 30 minutes had been. The end results
The research question asks how varying sucrose concentrations affect the rate of anaerobic cell respiration in yeast, measured in CO2 production. The rate of anaerobic respiration will be determined by measuring the rate of CO2 production by the yeast cells.
For the experiment, the changes of temperature on anaerobic fermentation the process in which cells undergo respiration without oxygen in Saccharomyces cerevisiae was observed. The purpose of this experiment was to test the effect of four different temperatures on the rate of carbon dioxide production in yeast by measuring the fermentation rate. Saccharomyces cereviviae, also known as Baker 's yeast, is a unicellular, eukaryotic sac fungus and is good for this experiment because of its characteristic of alcohol fermentation. It was hypothesized that fermentation increases with increased temperature to a point of 37°C; above that point, enzyme denaturing will occur and fermentation will decrease. The group was able to document the carbon dioxide production and mark each of the temperature intervals which were tested at temperatures 4°C (refrigerator temperature), 23°C (Room temperature), 37°C (Human body temperature) and 65° Celsius (Equal to 150°F). The experiment was conducted by pouring yeast solution with 2% glucose in fermentation tubes, placing the tubes in the appropriate incubation temperature, marking the rise of the gas bubbles in the fermentation tubes which indicated carbon dioxide production. The results of this experiment were not supported by the hypothesis, creating different results from what was predicted. It is important to understand the fermentation rate of yeast so
1. Lab reports are to be computer-generated and double-spaced. All sections of the report must
produced per minute. The results show a trend wherein increased concentrations of sucrose increase the rate of cellular respiration.
4) One package of active dry yeast was added to bottle labeled ‘5mL’ and solution was swirled.