Yes Yes
They are all molecules capable of forming hydrogen bonds.
Because glucose has many -OH groups, which are capable of forming hydrogen bonds with water molecules.
Cholesterol does not contain any hydroxyl groups that are capable of forming hydrogen bonds on their own. However, cholesterol molecules can interact with other molecules that have hydrogen bond donor and acceptor sites.
Yes, C3H7OH (propan-1-ol) can exhibit hydrogen bonding. The -OH group in propan-1-ol is capable of forming hydrogen bonds with other molecules containing hydrogen bond donors or acceptors.
Yes, water is capable of forming a maximum of four hydrogen bonding interactions. A water molecule can form two hydrogen bonds with neighboring molecules, one using each of its hydrogen atoms, resulting in a total of four hydrogen bonds.
Water molecules contain polar covalent bonds due to the unequal sharing of electrons between oxygen and hydrogen atoms. This polarity allows water molecules to form hydrogen bonds with neighboring water molecules, as the slightly positive hydrogen atom attracts the slightly negative oxygen atom of another water molecule. This unique structure and polarity of water molecules make them capable of forming hydrogen bonds with up to four neighboring water molecules, resulting in strong intermolecular forces.
Hydrogen has one electron and is therefore capable of forming only one bond.
Complementary nitrogenous bases are held together by hydrogen bonds. Adenine pairs with thymine (or uracil in RNA) by forming two hydrogen bonds, while cytosine pairs with guanine by forming three hydrogen bonds. These hydrogen bonds provide the necessary stability for the base pairing in DNA and RNA molecules.
Yes, CH3OCH2CH3 (dimethyl ether) can form hydrogen bonds with other molecules. The oxygen atom in CH3OCH2CH3 is capable of participating in hydrogen bonding with hydrogen atoms from other molecules that have hydrogen bond donors, such as OH or NH groups.
hydrophilic
because the hydrogen bonds in water will readily detach themselves from the oxygen molecules to form stronger bonds with other said molecules.
A water molecule can form up to four hydrogen bonds, one with each of the two hydrogen atoms and two with the oxygen atom.