Many polymers consist of a single kind of monomer that repeats over again multiple times.
Monomers come together to form polymers through dehydration condensation and polymers split apart from monomers through hydrolysis.
um i think they form from monomers
YES! polyvinyl chloride is a synthetic polymer. This is so because it is a polychain made up of repeated units of monomers. More specifically this plastic has the presence of HCl and ethyne within the organic compound. This is a type of a plastic used for various purposes such as insulation for electrical wires.
hydrolysis (: thankyou come again .
There are almost limitless numbers of monomers in use for polymer manufacture. If you look at the names of polymer types you will see that monomers must come from very many basic chemical families - polyesters are made from diacids and diols, polyolefines are made from alkenes, nylons are made from diacids and diamines, polyvinyls are made from substituted ethylenes, polyacrylics are made from substituted and pure acrylic acid (propenoic acid) etc. etc etc. Many polymers use mixed types of monomer. ethene is the answer dont read this wrong and long thing this person above wrote.
Monomers come together to form polymers through dehydration condensation and polymers split apart from monomers through hydrolysis.
Energy, by cellular respiration. Polymers of glucose, for instance, come into the body via your food and enzymes break them into monomers so they can be easily used in the cellular respiration process.
um i think they form from monomers
Monomers are smaller molecules which, connected by covalent chemical bonds, link together to form huge polymer molecules. These molecules tend to be very strong, and are found in substances such as plastics. Remember: mono=1, poly=many
Like with all nutrients, monomers are joined together by condensation reactions. The carboxyl group and the hydroxyl group come together and produce a water molecule. The monomers are called monosaccharides, two monomers are called disaccharides, and more than two monomers are called polysaccharides.
YES! polyvinyl chloride is a synthetic polymer. This is so because it is a polychain made up of repeated units of monomers. More specifically this plastic has the presence of HCl and ethyne within the organic compound. This is a type of a plastic used for various purposes such as insulation for electrical wires.
Glycosidic bonds are how monomers (monosaccharides) are linked together to form a polysaccharide. Like with all nutrient reactions, this is done through a condensation or dehydration reaction. The two carboxyl groups of two monomers come together. One monomer donates a hydrogen, while the other donates a hydroxyl, creating a molecule of water.
Glucose itself is a monomer of both sugar and starch. A monomer is a component of a polymer; in other words, many monomers come together to form a polymer. In the glucose example, many glucose molecules can come together to form complex carbohydrates- the polymer of glucose. Source: AP Biology
Plants do make and use some polymers (e.g. starch, cellulose etc.), as do some animals (e.g. spider silk) but most of what we know as polymers are artificial (e.g. polyethylene, nylon etc.).
This happens on a complex molecualr level. The calories aren't actually "made". They come from molecules, polymers, macromolecules, and monomers. This happens when amino acids, glucoses, and atoms combine to form molecules. Different molecules contain things like lipids (fats) or sugars (in sugar and starches) or proteins, which are what we know of as calories for energy.
A bond where both electrons come from one of the atoms. For example the bonds that hold two AlCl3 monomers together to form the dimeric Al2Cl6. Another name for coordinate covalent bond is dative bond.
hydrolysis (: thankyou come again .