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The most common members of the 'lipid family' are triglycerides: plant oil and fats, being 3-fold esters of three molecules of alkanoic (or alk-ene-oic) acids with one molecule of glycerol (1,2,3-propan-tri-ol). When hydrolysed these reactant are freed by de-esterfication called hydrolysis. (Other members of the lipid group are cholesterols, waxes, detergents are differently constituted, but most of them can also be hydrolysed).
Salicin hydrolysis: C6H11O5-OPhOH + H+/H20 --> C6H11O5-OH + HOPhOH
C4H9Br+NaOH > NaBr + C4H10O
Yes, it can. The equation is H202(aq) + H2O(l) --> HO2-(aq) + H3O+(aq).
There are three protolysis steps:H3PO4 ---> H+ + H2PO4-H2PO4- ---> H+ + HPO42-HPO42- ---> H+ + PO43-
B
lipid hydrolysis
oil
The most common members of the 'lipid family' are triglycerides: plant oil and fats, being 3-fold esters of three molecules of alkanoic (or alk-ene-oic) acids with one molecule of glycerol (1,2,3-propan-tri-ol). When hydrolysed these reactant are freed by de-esterfication called hydrolysis. (Other members of the lipid group are cholesterols, waxes, detergents are differently constituted, but most of them can also be hydrolysed).
derived lipid is define to as the hydrolysis of simple and compound lipids.in which water is liberated in the form of H20 not in the form of hyderation.....
C6H12O6 ia the equation for carbohydrates
Salicin hydrolysis: C6H11O5-OPhOH + H+/H20 --> C6H11O5-OH + HOPhOH
fatty acids and glycerol
a lipid bilayer
C4H9Br+NaOH > NaBr + C4H10O
The mechanism of the hydrolysis of lipid is known as catabolism of the lipids. This is a process through which lipids are digested and broken down to one molecule of glycerol and three molecules of fatty acids.
C55h98o6+3h2o--->c3h8o3+3c16h32o2