carrots, broccoli, corn,
The outer hull of corn is made of cellulose, which is indigestible to humans. Therefore, if you do not chew the cellulose hull, it will pass through your entire digestive system whole and sound, and you will see it in your feces.
The advantage to using high cellulose feedstocks such as sorghum and switchgrass instead of corn is that they are more environmentally friendly. These crops are more sustainable and require less water fertilizer and land than corn. Additionally they are better able to handle drought and extreme weather conditions making them more reliable sources of feedstock for biofuel production. Sorghum and switchgrass also have higher cellulose content than corn meaning more fuel can be produced from a given amount of the crop. Here are some of the benefits of using sorghum and switchgrass instead of corn: More sustainable and require less water fertilizer and land than corn. Better able to handle drought and extreme weather conditions. Higher cellulose content than corn meaning more fuel can be produced from a given amount.Overall using high cellulose feedstocks such as sorghum and switchgrass instead of corn is an environmentally friendly and sustainable way to produce biofuel.
High fructose corn syrup, Polysorbate, Cellulose gum, corn syrup, Trans fat, -or- MSG.
carnauba wax*, corn starch, hypromellose, powdered cellulose, triacetin
The energy source of ethanol is renewable plant material, such as corn, sugar cane, or cellulose from wood or grasses. This plant material undergoes fermentation to produce ethanol, which can be used as a fuel source.
As Corn grows it converts the suns energy, carbon dioxide and water into sugars, cellulose and oxygen. The Corn is harvested and a mash/ slurry of sorts is made and yeasts are added to ferment the sugars into alcohol. The resulting fermented mixture consists of water, ethanol and some methanol (from decomposition of some cellulose). This mixture is between 10 and 15% purity of ethanol. Large scale distillation is then employed to increase the purity of the ethanol to near 100%
They both contain linked chains of glucose molecules, starch being less complex than the cellulose fiber found in paper.
Corn is primarily composed of carbohydrates such as starch and cellulose, along with proteins, fats, and water. The chemical structure of corn can be generalized as C6H12O6 for the main carbohydrates, and it also contains various vitamins, minerals, and phytochemicals.
Sweet corn is soft from the day it blooms. "Cow" corn is hard it's entire lifespan. Corn feed is a better way of stating it. Hard corn "corn feed" is also packaged as popcorn. Just a little better cleaning.
cellulose is a polymer. it a chain of repeating monomers. the monomer for cellulose is glucose. cellulose is a polymer. it a chain of repeating monomers. the monomer for cellulose is glucose.
Corn, fresh or dried, is NOT safe for rabbits. The hull of corn kernels is composed of a complex polysaccharide (not cellulose and pectin, of which plant cell walls are more commonly composed, and which a rabbit can digest) which rabbits cannot digest. We know of more than one rabbit who suffered intestinal impactions because of the indigestible corn hulls. After emergency medical treatment, when the poor rabbits finally passed the corn, their fecal pellets were nearly solid corn hulls! Those rabbits were lucky.