Technically, a diomer. Practically speaking, a polymer
Polymerization reactions are the reactions that join monomers together to form polymers. These reactions involve the bonding of monomers through the formation of covalent bonds to create a larger molecule.
All polymers are formed from monomers joining together.
Monomers and isomers are completely different. Monomers are building blocks of polymers/macromolecules. For example, amino acids are the monomers of proteins and monosaccharides are monomers of carbohydrates. Isomers, on the other hand, are molecules with the same number of atoms in a compound, but different arrangements of bonds or shapes.
polymers
polymerisation.
Monomers are joined together to form polymers, for example, proteins are a polymer, it's monomer is amino acids, and they are linked by peptide bonds to form a protein
Linking bonds, most often dehydration reactions, where atoms/molecules are removed from certain ends of the monomers, forming an H2O molecule (water) and the monomers then join up. However, that is a general formula.
Transglycosylase enzymes join these monomers join together to form chains.
Should b in chemistry category, monomer has a single thing, but a polymer is when monomers join together, this needs heat, poly means change in Latin. Im 14 so if u r older u r dumb as ****
2.1 million
yes. that is one of the methods to form polymers.
When two or more join together a polymer forms a molecule.