Sodium oleate is an amphipathic compound.
Yes. The glycerol head is polar while the fatty acids are nonpolar. Thus, fat is indeed amphipathic.
They are amphipathic.
Yes, it is correct.
Amphipathic molecules are molecules that contain a hydrophilic region (water-loving region) and a hydrophobic region (water-hating region). Therefore, phospholipids, which are amphipathic molecules that make up our cell membranes, form into bilayer bio-membranes naturally due to the hydrophobic forces of attraction between each phospholipid molecule and the water-hating nature of it forces the molecules to orientate themselves with their hydrophobic sections facing inward and their hydrophilic sections outward. I hope this helps! :)
They do not have polar or charged regions.
Sodium oleate is an amphipathic compound.
Yes. However, more to the point is that steroid hormones are lipophilic.
Amphipathic nature.
Yes. The glycerol head is polar while the fatty acids are nonpolar. Thus, fat is indeed amphipathic.
I don't think that glucose has both hydrophyllic and hydrophobic ends though it is soluble. Think phospholipid for an amphipathic molecule.
the whole protein must be amphipathic but the surface itself must be hydrophobic.
amphipathic
They are amphipathic.
Yes, it is correct.
amphipathic molecules
An amphipol is any of a range of amphipathic polymers used as speciality surfactants.