lipids
Calories can become fat if you do not burn them off, along with monosaccharides (the monomers of carbohydrates).
No, saturated fat is not a monomer of a lipid. Monomers of lipids are fatty acids, which can be saturated or unsaturated. Saturated fats consist of long chains of saturated fatty acids.
The two monomers that form Kevlar are 1,4-phenylenediamine and terephthaloyl chloride. These monomers undergo a condensation polymerization reaction to form the long, stiff molecular chains characteristic of Kevlar.
No, unsaturated fat is not a polymer. It is a type of fat molecule that has double bonds in its carbon chain, making it different from polymers, which are large molecules made up of repeating units called monomers.
Monomers.
Yes, proteins have monomers called amino acids, lipids do not have monomers, carbohydrates have monomers called monosaccharides, and nucleic acids have monomers called nucleotides.
Nucleotides are the monomers. More specifically, the monomers are: Adenine Guanine Cytosine Thymine
The monomers of lipids are fatty acids.
Monomers are the building blocks of polymers.
The general name for monomers in carbohydrates is monosaccharid.
The name given to the monomers of proteins is amino acids.
Glucose monomers make up the polysaccharide starch.