Ok, so I know this sounds crazy, but can sucrose act as an acid in water?
My reason for stating this is as follows:
1. The pKa of sucrose is 12.62, since water has a pKa of 14 (STP) it can "pull off" the H+ from the many OH groups on the sugar molecule. Once H+ are free and into solution it can cause a change in pH.
2. Even if one individual H+ (from oH) did NOT contribute much to pH, remember that sugar is very polar and has a total of 8 hydroxyl groups in its structure - thereby contributing significantly when taken as a whole.
Again, I know this sounds crazy and is completely wrong - but why?
Even other sugars - fructose (pKa=12.06 @18C), glucose (pKa=12.92) have pKas listed.
What purpose then does stating the pKa for sucrose have? (in terms of acidity/basicity)References:
pKa data from:
http://sis.nlm.nih.gov/chemical.htmlOther info:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sucrose