It is non-polar chemical. Since the atoms in the fatty acids in oil share their electrons nicely, they (usually) have no charge, or at least not enough to make the whole molecule polar.
No they are negatively charged, nuetrons are nuetral, protons are positive, not all atoms have nuetrons
When an atom loses an electron and becomes negatively charged we refer to it as a positive ion
Yes, there are negatively charged atoms. In each atom, there are protons, which are positively charged, neutrons, which are neutrally charged (neither positive or negative), and lastly electrons, the negatively charged particles that travel outside of each atom in an electron cloud. So yes, there are negatively charged particles in each atom.
Hydrogen bonds can be formed between regions of polar molecules that are positive charged. Some of them can be negatively charged.
They are ALWAYS negatively charged. If positively charged it would be a positron and not an electron.
no, it is negatively charged
A negative charge attracts a positive charge and repels a negative charge. OPPOSITES ATTRACT ;)
No, they are negatively charged.
Nitrogen is negatively charged.
Electrons are negatively charged.
Negatively charged polysaccharides
positive protons
No they are negatively charged, nuetrons are nuetral, protons are positive, not all atoms have nuetrons
opposites attract, likes repel.
It can be either positively or negatively charged
It is a negatively charged object
It should normally be neutral, that is, it should not have a significant charge, positive or negative.