Because it is hydrophilic...."water-loving." Examples of these are sugars, salts and ions. :)
Actually ionic bonds would tend to be hydrophilic. Salts have ionic bonds and they dissolve rather well in water.
It is hydrophilic
Hydrophilic
hydrophilic
Yes.
A polar molecule is hydrophilic, which means that it will easily dissolve in water. Examples of hydrophilic molecules are sugars and salts.
Soap is made out of a mixture of hydrophilic salts, which is why it dissolves in water.
Yes, fructose is the most soluble carbohydrate in water.
Hydrophilic molecules are those that dissolve in or interact with water. Hydrophilic molecules include carbohydrates, proteins, nucleic acids, salts and metabolic molecules like glucose and amino acids. The fatty component of lipids [fats and oils], the -CH2- tail, is strictly hydrophobic.
Because it is hydrophilic...."water-loving." Examples of these are sugars, salts and ions. :)
Because it is hydrophilic...."water-loving." Examples of these are sugars, salts and ions. :)
Actually ionic bonds would tend to be hydrophilic. Salts have ionic bonds and they dissolve rather well in water.
hydrophilic b/c carbohydrates are made of sugars; sugars (such as glucose) have LOTS of hydroxyl groups which are hydrophilic, therefore carbohydrates are hydrophilic
It is hydrophilic
Hydrophilic
hydrophilic