Lipids
An organic molecule is a molecule and that contains carbon atoms that are connected to hydrogen, oxygen or nitrogen atoms. Glucose has carbon, hydrogen and oxygen atoms so it is organic.
Carbon Dioxide
An organic molecule comprises of carbon, oxygen and hydrogen. It may contain two or more atoms.
The three most common atoms in the body would be carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. By atoms: hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon By mass: oxygen, carbon, hydrogen
Fatty acid chains with all single bonds are saturated fatty acids. All of the carbon atoms are saturated with hydrogen atoms.
No, carbon bonding is almost entirely covalent bonding between two carbon atoms.
One Carbon can form four single covalent bonds with Hydrogen atoms.
hydrogen's nucleus is electron deficient when it bonds with an electronegative atoms
I assume you mean intermolecular hydrogen bonding. No, because carbon is insufficiently electronegative. In contrast, carbon tetrachloride exhibits some hydrogen bonding because of the electronegativity of the chlorine atoms.
Alkanes have the most possible number of hydrogen atoms with respect to the carbon again.
Organic substances contain carbon and hydrogen atoms. Organic compounds are formed by bonding carbon and hydrogen atoms. There can be more elements too. An atom can never be organic.
hydrogen
FON The atoms that hydrogen bonds to when hydrogen bonding occurs, due to electronegativity variance, are; Fluorine Oxygen Nitrogen
No. Lipid molecules that are unsaturated have less hydrogen atoms because of carbon-carbon double bonds.
A covalent bond because carbon and hydrogen are sharing electrons
there are two Carbon Atoms and six Hydrogen atoms
hydrogen bonding between H2O and covalent bonding within the H2O molecule