A hydrophyllic mixture is probably already dissolved in water. A solution is a mixture in which one substance dissolves in another, in this case water. In the case of the double layer of phospholipids that make up the cell membrane, the phosphate (hydrophillic) end dissolves in water and the lipid portion does not.
Hydrophilic - dissolves in water. "likes water"
in comparsion to : Hydrophobic- which doesn't dissolve in water. "Afraid of water"
a hydrophilic molecule dissolves in water
No
Yes. Cold water does disslove.
A hydrophilic substance will dissolve in water. A hydroPHOBIC substance will not.
Hydrophobic is when something repels water and hydrophilic is when something attracts water.
A polar molecule is hydrophilic, which means that it will easily dissolve in water. Examples of hydrophilic molecules are sugars and salts.
if something is hydrophilic, it means that it is soluble with water
Yes
Yes. Cold water does disslove.
A hydrophilic substance will dissolve in water. A hydroPHOBIC substance will not.
hydrophobic is water hating and hydrophilic is water loving ( attracts water).
Hydrophobic is when something repels water and hydrophilic is when something attracts water.
A polar molecule is hydrophilic, which means that it will easily dissolve in water. Examples of hydrophilic molecules are sugars and salts.
if something is hydrophilic, it means that it is soluble with water
melt salt would dissolve
A hydrophilic region is an area that has an affinity for water. Alanine, a side-chain of an amino acid is located on a hydrophilic region of a protein.
Hydrophilic means that a substance has an affinity for/attraction to water. It binds with water easily. [It is the opposite of hydrophobic, where a substance has an aversion for water. It forms droplets in water (like oil).]
it is the opposite. Hydrophobic is water hating, hydrophilic is water loving. ie, hydrophobic substances avoid water, hydrophilic are attracted
Water...