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No, that could be a phospholipid that you're thinking of. Water is a polar molecule.

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14y ago
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13y ago

hydro phobic = water hating

Water is polar so a hydrophobe is non polar

Hydrophobic means 'non polar' because it is expelled by polar solvents like water

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Q: Has water have polar heads and nonpolar tails?
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How does laundry detergent work on a molecular level?

The molecule that makes up soap or detergent has a polar head and a nonpolar tail. In chemistry, compounds that are polar like to mix with other polar compounds and compounds that are nonpolar like to mix with other nonpolar compounds. This is why oil and water don't mix. Water is polar and oil is nonpolar. Oil and grease are a nonpolar compounds. When in water the soap molecules will arrange themselves in such a way that the nonpolar tails surround the grease creating a spherical droplet. On the face of this sphere is the polar heads of the soap molecule. This allows it to interact with the polar water. This is how soap and laundry detergent are able to remove oil and grease and wash it down the drain.


Which molecules have heads and tails in the plasma membrane?

phospholipid molecules....they have polar hydrophillic head(like water-as there is phosphate group attached on it..phosphate group has oxygen molecules with all their pairs of unshared electrons.) and hydrophobic tails(scare water)


What part of the lipid likes water?

In general lipids are nonpolar molecule and water is polar and n'er the two shall mix. However, lipids can bond to something like a phosphate group which is polar and the phosphate group will face the water while the nonpolar hydrophobic tail will face away from the water.


Why is the phosphate the polar part of the phosphilipid?

The phospholipid heads are hydrophillic and prefer the water while the tails are hydrophobic and are shielded from the water.


Is dish detergent polar or non polar?

both, the water is polar and the chemicals are non polar


What part of a phospholipid is polar and non-polar?

The phospholipid bilayer in cell membranes is both polar and nonpolar. The heads, which face the outside and inside of the cell, are polar. Thus they form hydrogen bonds with the water outside of the cell and the cytoplasm inside the cell. They are called "hydrophilic," which means they love water. The tails are on the inside of the bilayer and are nonpolar. They are hydrophobic, which literally means they are scared of water.


Are triglycerides polar or non-polar?

Yes. Like carbohydrates, lipids also contain oxygen, hydrogen and carbon. But unlike COH, they have much fewer oxygen atoms. As a result lipids are said to be saturated with hydrogen atoms making the bonds between atoms non polar convalent. This means that lipids do not disolve in water. This property is know as being hydrophobic


The water soluble portion of a phospholipid is the polar head which generally consists of a glycerol molecule linked to a phosphate group?

No, you do not have that quite correct. A Phospholipid molecule has one end that is hydrophilic (is attracted to water) while the other end is hydrophobic (is repelled water but is attracted to fats).


How does polar phospholipid form a bilayer?

A lipid bilayer forms spontaneously whenever a collection of phospholipids is placed in water. This is because the amphipathic lipids (lipids having both polar and nonpolar regions) double up and put hydrophilic ends toward the outside and inside of the cell, whereas the hydrophobic tails are held in between the heads. A phospholipid is comprised of 1 polar head and two non-polar (fatty-acid) tails o<>o The polar region is comprised of a phosophate group (water-soluble) The non-polar region is comprised of fatty acids (water-insoluble)


What polar molecules are attracted to water?

Hydrophobic molecules do not dissolve in water. This is because water is hydrophilic. Another way to say this is that lipids, which are nonpolar, cannot dissolve in water, which in polar.


Is watar a polar or nonpolar?

Water is polar


When phospholipid molecules are placed in water they form bilayer membranes Describe what you think happens to cause the formation of the bilayer membranes?

The hydrophobic and hydrophilic effect. The nonpolar tails join together in the middle of the bilayer away from water and the polar heads that can tolerate water are on the outside of the bilayer.