Small molecules are absorbed in the small intestine...
I hope this helped...
Large Food Molecules in The Small Intestine!
The small, soluble molecules get through the wall of the small intestine and into the blood
Enzymes in the small intestine can break larger molecules such as proteins into smaller molecules such as amino acids. These enzymes are either produced in the pancreas and taken to the first part of the small intestine by the pancreatic duct or some enzymes may be produced by the lining of the small intestine called the "brush border" in the first part of the small intestine. Large molecules such as proteins or starch need to be broken down to smaller molecules before they can be absorbed into the bloodstream and beusableto the person's body cells.
The food molecules are absorbed in the small intestine. Through these finger shaped things along the wall of the small intestine, called the villi.
Small intestine
Nutrient molecules pass from the small intestine into the through tiny structures called villi.
proteinslipidscarbohydrates
Small Molecules enter the small intestine after going through the stomach. It gets broken into even smaller pieces. Then it goes into capillaries.
Acid breaks the food from big molecules to small, tiny molecules so that small intestine can easily digest it.
the small intestine
small intestine
Absorption is the process