Saturated fat
An alkene such as propene has 1 double bond. An alkene can also have many single bonds. In Dodecene for example there are 12 carbons. Two of the carbons are linked by a double bond and all the others by single bonds. In addition, the carbon-hydrogen bonds are all single bonds too.
An organic compound can exist without single bonds between carbons by forming double or triple bonds. This results in a double bond occurring between two carbons (C=C) or a triple bond between them (C≡C), allowing for the sharing of more than one pair of electrons and altering the compound's structure and properties.
All of the carbons have to be attached to the maximum amount of hydrogens. So there can only be single bonds between the carbons in order for the molecules to be saturated.
Ethane has nonpolar covalent bonds. These bonds are formed between the carbon and hydrogen atoms in ethane, where the electrons are shared evenly between the atoms.
Toluene contains mostly non-polar covalent bonds, such as carbon-carbon and carbon-hydrogen bonds, due to the nature of its molecular structure. These bonds are formed through the sharing of electrons between atoms.
Alkynes with a generic formula of CnH2n-2 are a family of hydrocarbons that all contain triple bonds.
CH4 has only single bonds.There are no double bonds.
Because the unsaturated fats contains double bonds between some of the carbons, saturated fats only contain single bonds between all of the carbons. The double bonding gives the molecules a different goemetry.
phenotype
No, it is aqueous. It contains no carbons, i.e. no carbon-hydrogen bonds
An alkane.
No, alkanes do not have double bonds. Alkanes are saturated hydrocarbons that only contain single bonds between carbon atoms.