Sodium oleate is an amphipathic compound.
Yes. The glycerol head is polar while the fatty acids are nonpolar. Thus, fat is indeed amphipathic.
They are amphipathic.
Presumably you mean surfactant and water? A classic surfactant molecule has a polar, hydrophilic end and a non-polar hydrocarbon liophilic end. With enough of a suitable surfactant, oil droplets will form with the liophilic part of surfactant molecules dissolved in the droplets and water molecules attached to the hydrophilic part of the surfactant. The oil disperses in the water.
Fetuses begin to produce surfactant between weeks 24 and 28.
Sodium oleate is an amphipathic compound.
Yes. However, more to the point is that steroid hormones are lipophilic.
Amphipathic nature.
A surface-active agent 'surfactant' usually cleans something. ie -soap is a surfactant.
Yes. The glycerol head is polar while the fatty acids are nonpolar. Thus, fat is indeed amphipathic.
I don't think that glucose has both hydrophyllic and hydrophobic ends though it is soluble. Think phospholipid for an amphipathic molecule.
Surfactant is pleural fluid.
What is the interfacial properties of surfactant solution?
secrete surfactant
The main function or job of a surfactant is to reduce surface tension. This process is used on liquids while it dissolves.
Normally surfactant replacement therapy keeps the infant alive until the lungs start producing their own surfactant.
the whole protein must be amphipathic but the surface itself must be hydrophobic.