Inverted sugar syrup explained

Inverted sugar syrup, also called invert syrup, invert sugar,[1] simple syrup, sugar syrup, sugar water, bar syrup, syrup USP, or sucrose inversion, is a syrup mixture of the monosaccharides glucose and fructose, that is made by hydrolytic saccharification of the disaccharide sucrose. This mixture's optical rotation is opposite to that of the original sugar, which is why it is called an invert sugar.

It is 1.3x sweeter than table sugar,[2] and foods that contain invert sugar retain moisture better and crystallize less easily than do those that use table sugar instead. Bakers, who call it invert syrup, may use it more than other sweeteners.[3]

Production

Additives

Commercially prepared enzyme-catalyzed solutions are inverted at 60°C. The optimum pH for inversion is 5.0. Invertase is added at a rate of about 0.15% of the syrup's weight, and inversion time will be about 8 hours. When completed the syrup temperature is raised to inactivate the invertase, but the syrup is concentrated in a vacuum evaporator to preserve color.[4]

Though inverted sugar syrup can be made by heating table sugar in water alone, the reaction can be sped up by adding lemon juice, cream of tartar, or other catalysts, often without changing the flavor noticeably. Common sugar can be inverted quickly by mixing sugar and citric acid or cream of tartar at a ratio of about 1000:1 by weight and adding water. If lemon juice, which is about five percent citric acid by weight, is used instead then the ratio becomes 50:1. Such a mixture, heated to 114°C[5] and added to another food, prevents crystallization without tasting sour.

Commercially prepared hydrochloric-acid catalyzed solutions may be inverted at the relatively low temperature of 50°C. The optimum pH for acid-catalyzed inversion is 2.15. As the inversion temperature is increased, the inversion time decreases.[4] They are then given a pH neutralization when the desired level of inversion is reached.[6] [7]

In confectionery and candy making, cream of tartar is commonly used as the acidulant, with typical amounts in the range of 0.15–0.25% of the sugar's weight.[8] The use of cream of tartar imparts a honey-like flavor to the syrup. After the inversion is completed, it may be neutralized with baking soda using a weight of 45% of the cream of tartar's weight.[9] [10]

For fermentation

All constituent sugars (sucrose, glucose, and fructose) support fermentation, so invert sugar solutions of any composition can be fermented.

Syrup is used to feed microbiological life, which requires oxygen found in the water. For example, kombucha is produced by fermenting inverted sugar syrup with tea using a symbiotic culture of bacteria and yeast (SCOBY), and yeast in winemaking is used for ethanol fermentation. Cold water can hold more dissolved oxygen than warm water, but granulated sugar does not dissolve easily in cold water.

Water in a container with wide bottom surface area allows for faster dissolving of the sucrose, which only has to be mixed a few times periodically to form a homogeneous solution. Also, a mixer or blender may be used to rotate the sugar, in turns, if necessary.

In other foods and products

Sweetened beverages

Inverted sugar syrup is the basis in sweetened beverages.

Chemistry

Table sugar (sucrose) is converted to invert sugar by hydrolysis. Heating a mixture or solution of table sugar and water breaks the chemical bond that links together the two simple-sugar components.

The balanced chemical equation for the hydrolysis of sucrose into glucose and fructose is:

C12H22O11 (sucrose) + H2O (water) → C6H12O6 (glucose) + C6H12O6 (fructose)

Optical rotation

Once a sucrose solution has had some of its sucrose turned into glucose and fructose the solution is no longer said to be pure. The gradual decrease in purity of a sucrose solution as it is hydrolyzed affects a chemical property of the solution called optical rotation that can be used to figure out how much of the sucrose has been hydrolyzed and therefore whether the solution has been inverted or not.

Definition and measurement

Plane polarized light can be shone through a sucrose solution as it is heated up for hydrolysis. Such light has an 'angle' that can be measured using a tool called a polarimeter. When such light is shone through a solution of pure sucrose it comes out the other side with a different angle than when it entered, which is proportional to both the concentration of the sugar and the length of the path of light through the solution; its angle is therefore said to be 'rotated' and how many degrees the angle has changed (the degree of its rotation or its 'optical rotation') is given a letter name,

\alpha

(alpha). When the rotation between the angle the light has when it enters and when it exits is in the clockwise direction, the light is said to be 'rotated right' and

\alpha

is given to have a positive angle such as 64°. When the rotation between the angle the light has when it enters and when it exits is in the counterclockwise direction, the light is said to be 'rotated left' and

\alpha

is given a negative angle such as −39°.

Definition of the inversion point

When plane polarized light enters and exits a solution of pure sucrose its angle is rotated 66.5° (clockwise or to the right). As the sucrose is heated up and hydrolyzed the amount of glucose and fructose in the mixture increases and the optical rotation decreases. After

\alpha

passes zero and becomes a negative optical rotation, meaning that the rotation between the angle the light has when it enters and when it exits is in the counter clockwise direction, it is said that the optical rotation has 'inverted' its direction. This leads to the definition of an 'inversion point' as the per cent amount sucrose that has to be hydrolyzed before

\alpha

equals zero. Any solution which has passed the inversion point (and therefore has a negative value of

\alpha

) is said to be 'inverted'.

Chirality and specific rotation

As the shapes of the molecules ('chemical structures') of sucrose, glucose, and fructose are all asymmetrical the three sugars come in several different forms, called stereoisomers. The existence of these forms is what gives rise to these chemicals' optical properties. When plane polarized light passes through a pure solution of one of these forms of one of the sugars it is thought to hit and 'glance off' certain asymmetrical chemical bonds within the molecule of that form of that sugar. Because those particular bonds (which in cyclic sugars like sucrose, glucose, and fructose include an anomeric bond) are different in each form of the sugar, each form rotates the light to a different degree.

When any one form of a sugar is purified and put in water, it rapidly takes other forms of the same sugar. This means that a solution of a pure sugar normally has all of its stereoisomers present in the solution in different amounts which usually do not change much. This has an 'averaging' effect on all of the optical rotation angles (

\alpha

values) of the different forms of the sugar and leads to the pure sugar solution having its own 'total' optical rotation, which is called its 'specific rotation' or 'observed specific rotation' and which is written as

[\alpha]

.

In the circumstance of 20 °C, the specific optical rotation of sucrose is known to be 66.6°, glucose is 52.2°, and fructose is −92.4°.[13]

Effects of water

Water molecules do not have chirality, therefore they do not have any effect on the measurement of optical rotation. When plane polarized light enters a body of pure water its angle is no different from when it exits. Thus, for water,

[\alpha]

= 0°. Chemicals that, like water, have specific rotations that equal zero degrees are called 'optically inactive' chemicals and like water, they do not need to be considered when calculating optical rotation, outside of the concentration and path length.

Mixtures in general

The overall optical rotation of a mixture of chemicals can be calculated if the proportion of the amount of each chemical in the solution is known. If there are

N

-many optically active different chemicals ('chemical species') in a solution and the molar concentration (the number of moles of each chemical per liter of liquid solution) of each chemical in the solution is known and written as

Ci

(where

i

is a number used to identify the chemical species); and if each species has a specific rotation (the optical rotation of that chemical were it made as a pure solution) written as

[\alpha]i

, then the mixture has the overall optical rotation\displaystyle \alpha = \frac = \sum_^N \left(\frac\right)[\alpha]_i = \sum_^N \chi_i[\alpha]_iWhere

\chii

is the mole fraction of the

i

th
species.

Fully hydrolyzed sucrose

Assuming no extra chemical products are formed by accident (that is, there are no side reactions) a completely hydrolyzed sucrose solution no longer has any sucrose and is a half-and-half mixture of glucose and fructose. This solution has the optical rotation\displaystyle \alpha = \frac[\alpha]_ + \frac[\alpha]_ = \frac(52.7^\circ - 92.0^\circ) = -19.7^\circ

Partly hydrolyzed sucrose

If a sucrose solution has been partly hydrolyzed, then it contains sucrose, glucose and fructose and its optical rotation angle depends on the relative amounts of each for the solution;\displaystyle \alpha = \chi_s[\alpha]_s +\chi_g[\alpha]_g +\chi_f[\alpha]_fWhere

s

,

g

, and

f

stand for sucrose, glucose, and fructose.

The particular values of

\chi

do not need to be known to make use of this equation as the inversion point (per cent amount of sucrose that must be hydrolyzed before the solution is inverted) can be calculated from the specific rotation angles of the pure sugars. The reaction stoichiometry (the fact that hydrolyzing one sucrose molecule makes one glucose molecule and one fructose molecule) shows that when a solution begins with

x0

moles of sucrose and no glucose nor fructose and

x

moles of sucrose are then hydrolyzed the resulting solution has

x0-x

moles of sucrose,

x

moles of glucose and

x

moles of fructose. The total number of moles of sugars in the solution is therefore

x+x0

and the reaction progress (per cent completion of the hydrolysis reaction) equals
x
x0

x 100\%

. It can be shown that the solution's optical rotation angle is a function of (explicitly depends on) this per cent reaction progress. When the quantity
x
x0
is written as

r

and the reaction is

r x 100\%

done, the optical rotation angle is\displaystyle \alpha_ = \frac = \frac\left([\alpha]_s + ([\alpha]_g + [\alpha]_f - [\alpha]_s) r\right)

By definition,

\alpha

equals zero degrees at the 'inversion point'; to find the inversion point, therefore, alpha is set equal to zero and the equation is manipulated to find

r

. This gives\displaystyle r_ = \frac = 0.629 Thus it is found that a sucrose solution is inverted once at least

62.9\%

of the sucrose has been hydrolyzed into glucose and fructose.

Monitoring reaction progress

Holding a sucrose solution at temperatures of 50°C60°C hydrolyzes no more than about 85% of its sucrose. Finding

\alpha

when r = 0.85 shows that the optical rotation of the solution after hydrolysis is done is −12.7° this reaction is said to invert the sugar because its final optical rotation is less than zero. A polarimeter can be used to figure out when the inversion is done by detecting whether the optical rotation of the solution at an earlier time in its hydrolysis reaction equals −12.7°.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: What are the types of sugar? . https://web.archive.org/web/20090301033842/http://www.sugar.org/consumers/sweet_by_nature.asp?id=275 . March 1, 2009 . The Sugar Association . dead . mdy-all .
  2. Web site: Making simple syrup is an exercise in chemical reactions . A Word from Carol Kroskey . May 1, 2006 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070714004114/http://www.bakers-exchange.com/articles/2000/april.html . July 14, 2007 . In addition to increased moisture retention ability, converting sucrose to invert syrup has two other interesting results: increased sweetness and better solubility. On a sweetness scale where sucrose is set at 100, invert syrup ranks about 130..
  3. Book: Hubert . Schiweck . Margaret . Clarke . Günter . Pollack . Sugar . Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry . 2007 . Wiley-VCH . Weinheim . 10.1002/14356007.a25_345.pub2 . 978-3527306732 .
  4. Book: W. Minifie, Bernard . Chocolate, Cocoa and Confectionery: Science and Technology . 1989 . Aspen Publishers, Inc. . 083421301X . 246 . 3rd . July 3, 2014 . .
  5. Web site: Invert sugar recipe . Eddy . Van Damme . September 27, 2012 .
  6. Book: Michael D. . Ranken . R.C. . Kill . C. . Baker . Food Industries Manual . 1997 . Blackie Academic & Professional . London . 0751404047 . 407–408 . 24th . June 30, 2014 . Google Books . Commercially, invert sugar is prepared as a syrup of about 70% soluble solids concentration. Invert sugar can be produced by holding a 65% sucrose solution containing 0.25% hydrochloric acid at 50°C (122°F) for one hour. Sodium bicarbonate should then be added to neutralize the acid. .
  7. 1904 . The Sugar Beet . July 4, 2014 . The Sugar Beet . H.C. Baird & Company . Philadelphia . 171–172 . Google Books . 25 . 10.
  8. Book: Lean . Michael E.J. . Fox and Cameron's Food Science, Nutrition & Health . 2006 . CRC Press . Boca Raton, FL . 9780340809488 . 110 . 7th . July 1, 2014 . Google Books .
  9. Book: Morrison . Abraham Cressy . The Baking Powder Controversy . 1 . 1904 . The American Baking Powder Association . New York . 154 . July 2, 2014 . Google Books . The best cream of tarter baking powder on the market contains about 28 per cent of bicarbonate of soda. To neutralize this quantity ... 62.6 per cent of cream of tartar is required. This quantity will leave in the food 70 per cent of anhydrous Rochelle Salts. .
  10. Book: Joseph A. . Maga . Anthony T. . Tu . Food Additive Toxicology . 1995 . Marcel Dekker . New York . 0824792459 . 71, table 24 . July 3, 2014 . Google Books .
  11. Web site: Creme Egg . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20141216222828/https://www.cadbury.co.uk/products/Creme-Egg-2392?p=2392 . December 16, 2014 . April 10, 2015 . Cadbury.
  12. Web site: LaBau . Elizabeth . What is Invertase? . About.com . April 10, 2015 . April 6, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150406171447/http://candy.about.com/od/candyglossary/g/What-Is-Invertase.htm . dead .
  13. 7867249 . 2021 . Li . D. . Weng . C. . Ruan . Y. . Li . K. . Cai . G. . Song . C. . Lin . Q. . An Optical Chiral Sensor Based on Weak Measurement for the Real-Time Monitoring of Sucrose Hydrolysis . Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) . 21 . 3 . 1003 . 10.3390/s21031003 . 33540721 . 2021Senso..21.1003L . free .