Q. Match the sugars in column I with their types given in column II and mark the appropriate choice.
Column I Column II
Glucose (i) Ketohexose
(B) Fructose (ii) Aldohexose
(C) Ribose (iii) Aldotetrose
(D) Erythrose (iv) Aldopentose

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Solution:

An aldohexose is a hexose with an aldehyde group on one end. The aldohexoses have four chiral centres for a total of possible aldohexose stereoisomers . Of these, only three commonly occur in nature: D-glucose, D-galactose, and D-mannose.
A ketohexose is a ketone-containing hexose (a six-carbon monosaccharide). The most common ketohexoses, each of which represents a pair of enantiomers (D- and L-isomers), include psicose, fructose, sorbose, and tagatose.
Ribose is an aldopentose, which means a pentose sugar with an aldehyde functional group in position one
Erythrose is a tetrose saccharide with the chemical formula . It has one aldehyde group, and so is part of the aldose family.