None. Hydrogen only has ONE electron.
none
3
It depends on the bonding. Are the elements bonded to each other? or is the question simply as the maximum number of bonds for each element separately? Carbon has 4 bonds, hydrogen has 1 bond, oxygen has 2 bonds.
A double hydrogen bond binds adenine and thymine
Organic compounds with single bonds have saturated bonds. Unsaturated bonds are double or triple bonds. Compounds with saturated bonds have the maximum number of atoms that can be bond.
Single, double, and triple carbon-carbon bonds; carbon-hydrogen bonds; carbon-halogen bonds; hydrogen-hydrogen bonds; nitrogen-nitrogen bonds; single and double carbon-oxygen bonds; silicon-oxygen bonds in silicone polymers.
No. Lipid molecules that are unsaturated have less hydrogen atoms because of carbon-carbon double bonds.
Fatty acids that contain carbon atoms linked by double or triple bonds are unsaturated. They do not have the maximum number of hydrogen atoms possible.
three
Carbon forms a maxiumum of four bonds, which can be in the form of two double bonds.
It depends on the length of the fatty acid chain. A fatty acid that has the maximum number of hydrogen atoms is saturated. The maximum number of hydrogen atoms will occur when the carbon atoms are all single-bonded to one another (no double bonds).
3
4
It depends on the bonding. Are the elements bonded to each other? or is the question simply as the maximum number of bonds for each element separately? Carbon has 4 bonds, hydrogen has 1 bond, oxygen has 2 bonds.
hydrogen bonds
2
A double hydrogen bond binds adenine and thymine
Double bonds