high-energy bonds
No. A carbohydrate is a sugar, just with a longer chain. Carbohydrates and sugars are both types of saccharide, the shorter the chain, the easier they are to metabolise (generally speaking). The strength of a covalent bond depends on which elements are joined, how many bonds there are between the elements and, to a lesser degree the rest of the molecule.
C=c Double carbon-carbon bond
The bond that holds the phosphorus and oxygen atoms together in ATP is a high-energy phosphoanhydride bond. This bond stores energy that can be used by cells for various processes.
Lipid
An example of something that stores chemical energy is a battery. Batteries store energy in the form of chemical compounds that can be converted into electrical energy when needed.
A high-energy phosphoanhydride bond joins the phosphates of ATP. This bond stores a large amount of energy that can be released when broken through hydrolysis.
The chemical bond that stores the most energy is typically the bond found in molecules of explosives, such as nitrogen-nitrogen triple bonds or carbon-carbon triple bonds. When these bonds are broken, a large amount of energy is released, leading to explosive reactions.
No. A carbohydrate is a sugar, just with a longer chain. Carbohydrates and sugars are both types of saccharide, the shorter the chain, the easier they are to metabolise (generally speaking). The strength of a covalent bond depends on which elements are joined, how many bonds there are between the elements and, to a lesser degree the rest of the molecule.
One molecule of glucose stores 90 times the amount of chemical energy than one molecule of ATP.
Gram for gram, fats store the most amount of energy in the body, approximately double the amount of energy carbohydrates store.
long story short the answer is mitochondria
10 feet
10 feet
10 feet
The top 10 feet of the ocean stores the same amount of energy as the entire atmosphere. This is because water has a high heat capacity, meaning it can absorb and store large amounts of heat energy compared to air.
C=c Double carbon-carbon bond
fats and oils have more than twice the energy of other organic chemicals.