Lipids, man!
Could be the phospholipid bilayer of a cell membrane to be more specific.
phospholipid
Soap and detergent molecules have a polar head and nonpolar tail to help dissolve an dwash off dirt and oil.
LIPIDS are the biomolecule which has polar head and non polar tail
That is a phospholipid and they are used for myelin coatings in the brain and for cell membranes.
phospholipid
Phospholipid bilayer.
Sounds like a surfactant
phospholipids
Phospholipid.
The head (or top) of a phospholipid is polar and the carbon chain tail is non-polar.
a non polar molecule
Because long hydrocarbon tails cannot interact with water
Oxalic acid is a non-polar molecule due to its molecular structure.
Krypton Is a non-polar molecule.
The compound with both a non-polar tail and a polar head is called an amphiphilic molecule. An amphiphilic molecule can form micelles. These such micelles is how detergents dissolve dirt. A big example of micelles are phospholipids.
they have a polar head and non-polar tails
they have a polar head and non-polar tails
Lipids, both fats and oils, have a polar head and a non-polar tail.
Phospholipids
A non polar head and a polar tail
The head (or top) of a phospholipid is polar and the carbon chain tail is non-polar.
both, the water is polar and the chemicals are non polar
Phospholipids :)
Phospholipids :)
This is called the hydrophobic 'side' of the phospholipid molecule
the two fatty acid tails of the phospholipids are nonpolar, whereas the head is polar