This depends on how many carbon atoms. There are several saturated fatty acids and all are solid at room temperature. They contain only single bonds in a very long straight hydro-carbon chain.
Mainly called fats. Their source is from animals.
Saturated Lipids. examples are: Bacon grease, lard, butter.
Examples: generally saturated fatty acids as lauric, stearic, erucic, palmitic, etc.
Erucic acid is an example.
butter
Saturated
fats
saturated
At room temperature and standard pressure the element Boron is a solid.
It is a solid at room temperature. It is in the d block.
Gold is a solid at Room temperature and pressure.
Generally salts are solid at room temperature.
Lithium is solid in room temperature.
Loosely speaking, "saturated" in fats means "solid at room temperature".
There is three fatty acid modules in a triglyceride which is the main component in fat.
the presence of double boned carbons in fatty acid hydrocarbon chains and the degree of packing of fatty acid chains.
Ascorbic acid tablets are solid a room temperature.
One of the properties of saturated fats is that they are solid at room temperature. It has to do with the fact that there are more hydrogen atoms in the saturated fatty acid molecules than in unsaturated fats.
Butter contains saturated fatty acids. We can know this because saturated fatty acids are solid at room temperature, and butter is solid at room temperature.
Vegetable oils are liquid at room temp, while animal fats are solid.
"Fatty Acids" take on two 'forms' - 'fats' are from animal sources and are solid at room temperature whereas 'oils' are from plant sources and are liquid at room temperature.
exist as liquid (oils) at room temperature.
Citric acid is a solid.
Salicylic acid is a solid at room temperature.
solid