Yes serine is a polar amino acid as it has an hydroxyl group (OH-) attached to the r group.
The functional group in alcohols is the hydroxyl -OH.
The polar group -OH of ethanol is bonded to water by hydrogen bonds.
Because the OH group makes it polar and therefore attracted to water molecules
alcohol homologous series OH is the functional group of ethanol
it is polar due to the OH hydroxyl group. all alcohols are polar due to the polar OH group.
It is polar because of the -OH group and the relatively small alkyl-group (-C2H5)
C=C=C-OH C3H6O very much polar with the OH group
Yes serine is a polar amino acid as it has an hydroxyl group (OH-) attached to the r group.
-OH group present in alcohol makes it a polar covalent compound.
The functional group in alcohols is the hydroxyl -OH.
It is certainly a polar molecule, although the exact value of it dipole moment I don't know.
OH (the hydroxide ion, or alcohol functional group) is strongly polar, and is thus very hydrophilic.
The hydroxyl -OH.
Polar because it contains a polar molecule between carbon and oxygen!
as ethanol is an alcohol containing polar group in its structure that is OH it is a polar group.As acetone is a carbonyl compound containig two CH3 groups which are non polar and Carbonyl group is slightly polar compared to alcoholic group so ethanol is highly polar than acetone
CH3OH is a polar molecule owing to the polarity rendered by the -OH group. Its structure can be thought of as very similar, if not exactly, to the water molecule, and the CH3- group decreases the polarity as compared to water.