Glycerol is very soluble in water. This is due to the reason that glycerol has three hydrophilic hydroxyl grups in its structure which make it very soluble in water.
No it isn't. The molecule is too big to be soluble in water.
Yes. Glycerol is miscible (soluble) in water, so it will make a solution.
Yes. It has 3 hydroxyl groups which helps it remain soluble in water.
The lipid glycerol is soluble in both water and ether. Olive oil is soluble in ether, but not water. A solid lipid is insoluble in water, methanol, and ether.
Yes, Iodine is soluble in glycerol. Although keep in my that Iodine is nonpolar because it has no dipole charges, but Glycerol is in fact polar. This is most likely explained by the polar and nonpolar tendencies of Glycerol.
Yes.
Yes, Zinc is soluble in Methanol and Glycerol
It is so soluble in water that it can form hydrogen bonds with water, leading to the formation of glywaterol. Chemical structure of glycerol is ether, after formation it will become carboxylic acid Properties of glycerol - It is alkaline Properties of water- It is neutral. Product formed properties(Glywaterol)-It is radiactive, the second most radioactive compared to uuu. School -School of biochemistry in Nus :)
yes
Diacylglycerol = non polar molecules Non polar molecules tend to be lipid soluable, (except in cases such as glucose) It is most likely lipid soluable because when it is cleaved off of the phopholipid, it stays in the membrane...
The polar end of the molecule is soluble in water (hydrophilic) and water solutions (including cytoplasm); the other, fatty-acid end is soluble in fats(hydrophobic).Read more: phospholipid
The motivation is the presence of three hydroxyl groups in glycerine.