J says carbon dioxide
In fats, its mainly stored in carbon-carbon bonds. In carbs, its mainly stored in both carbon-carbon bonds and carbon-oxygen bonds.
These are called saturated hydrocarbons.
A carbon can form a maximum of four bonds.
Carbon may have 4 bonds :)
Bonds between two (adjacent) C atoms.
Organic--Definition: In Chemistry, a substance or molecule containing carbon-carbon bonds...
alkenes
It does. That's called a diamond.
Saturated. This is because with no carbon-carbon double bonds the bonding sites are taken up by hydrogen, thus saturated. These saturated fats are solider tha unsaturated fats containing carbon-carbon double bonds.
carbon-carbon doble bonds.
Olefins or alkenes
Single, double, and triple carbon-carbon bonds; carbon-hydrogen bonds; carbon-halogen bonds; hydrogen-hydrogen bonds; nitrogen-nitrogen bonds; single and double carbon-oxygen bonds; silicon-oxygen bonds in silicone polymers.
With no double or triple bonds, they are called "saturated".
If the compounds only contain carbon and hydrogen, they are called alkanes.
Examples are oxygen, nitrogen , alkenes with carbon carbon double bonds, alkynes with carbon carbon triple bonds, the carbon oxygen double bonds in carbon dioxide
In fats, its mainly stored in carbon-carbon bonds. In carbs, its mainly stored in both carbon-carbon bonds and carbon-oxygen bonds.
Glucose is stored in carbon bonds.