Candy Energy - Sugar Bomb
Date: Monday, October 25 @ 17:43:24 EDT
Topic: Food For Thought


We often discuss energy savings at WattBusters but how often do we think about the ways that fuel is converted to energy.  Natural gas to heat, coal to electricity, sugar into screaming, bouncing children, etc.  Since it's close to Halloween and candy will probably be fairly abundant around the house, let's zero in on sugar.  

Sugar is technically a form of carbohydrates and carbohydrates are good for you, as long as you eat the right kinds in the right amounts. Carbohydrates are your body's main source of energy.   But before you reach for the carbs in a candy bar, take some time to learn about sugar.  Babies are born with a sweet tooth.  Human milk is quite sweet, so a child begins life making the connection between eating, drinking, and pleasure.

Over-processed, factory-made sugars have given carbohydrates a bad reputation.  To understand why these sugars merit the label "junk sugars," let's take a ride with these sugars from the mouth to the bloodstream to see how they affect the body. 

Junk sugars are called simple carbohydrates because they are short, uncomplicated molecules. Because simple sugars are already so small, they require little or no breaking down in the intestines. The sucrose molecule is quickly broken down into glucose and fructose, and all that glucose is actively pumped through the intestinal cells quickly into the bloodstream. A sprinkle of sugar that hits the intestines enters the bloodstream almost immediately, and the roller coaster ride begins.

After the refined sugars rush into the bloodstream, blood sugar levels rise, pressuring the pancreas to release insulin, the hormone needed to escort these sugars into the body's cells. Lots of insulin helps the sugar get used up rapidly, but then the blood sugar level plunges. The body hits a sugar low, also known as hypoglycemia or "sugar blues." Now, just as insulin was released when the blood sugar was too high, other hormones are released when the blood sugar is too low. These stress hormones want to restore the blood sugar to normal levels, so they squeeze stored sugar from the liver, sending the blood sugar back up. These adjustments work better in some people than in others and better in some circumstances than others.

A study comparing the sugar response in children and adults showed that the adrenaline levels in children remained ten times higher than normal for up to five hours after a test dose of sugar.  The general consensus is that some children and adults are sugar-sensitive, meaning their behavior, attention span, and learning ability deteriorate in proportion to the amount of junk sugar they consume. 

The energy of foods, as often printed on food packages, is measured in calories --"big" calories or kilo-calories, each equal to 4180 joule.  What's a joule?  A joule is equal to the kinetic energy of a two-kilogram mass moving at the speed of one meter per second.  OK... That's way too scientific and I don't think we want to go there.  Joules were named after an English brewer so we can assume we started off with 'happy' science.  Scientists measure work (a force acting over a distance) in joules.  The point of all of this is, if we know the calories, we can convert to joules and calculate how much energy in each calorie.

Carbohydrates give about 4 calories per gram. Fats and oils are a different family and contain about 9 calories per gram.  And proteins, give a net gain of about 4 calories per gram, after one subtracts the energy needed for their break-up from the amount they can supply.  According to NASA chemical energy formulas utilizing calories, weight and gravity, the energy of one calorie is enough to raise a 154 pound person by about 19.5 feet. Of course, if the efficiency of converting the chemical energy of food to muscle energy is only 10%, the person would only rise about 2 feet. Still, a typical American may consume 3000 calories per day, enough fuel for quite a bit of climbing. 

Sugar (a carbohydrate) gives about 4 calories per gram.  Interestingly, the explosive TNT--trinitrotoluene--only releases 3.8 calories per gram.  Its energy release may be extremely sudden, but in magnitude it falls below that of sugar.  So this Halloween, while giving new meaning to the words 'sugar bomb' you may finally understand why the kids are bouncing off walls.







This article comes from Energy Saver News; WattBusters
http://www.wattbusters.com/news

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