Most lipids have a carboxylic acid functional group.
Both lipids and carbohydrates share the hydroxyl functional group (-OH). In lipids, this group is found in glycerol, while in carbohydrates, it is found in monosaccharides like glucose.
Waxes consist mainly of esters, which are formed through the reaction between a fatty acid and a long-chain alcohol. This ester linkage is the functional group present in waxes.
The functional group is the NH2. It is an amino functional group.
It is the amino functional group amine
Functional groups are responsible for chemical reactions of molecules.
No, -CH3 is not a functional group. It is a methyl group, which is a common substituent in organic chemistry but not a functional group by itself.
Functional group is a part of an organic molecule which takes a part in chemical reaction for example in alcohols functional group is -OH , in carboxylic acids is -COOH and so on, but formaldehyde CH2O is a molecule and it is completely a functional group.
Functional group of ethanol is -OH.
Yes, phenyl is a functional group.
It's the carboxylic acid functional group (COOH).
Lipids are are large group of chemicals. There are many symbols for the the various molecules. I can't recall a symbol for the lipids as a group.