The fat would have to lose a hydrogen atom.
[So it would have a double bond between two carbon atoms]
Hydrogen
Hydrogen
To make a molecule unsaturated, a double bond would need to be removed. This results in the molecule having fewer hydrogen atoms bonded to the carbon atoms, allowing it to form additional bonds with other atoms or molecules.
Hydrogen
No elements are removed.H2O2 can be broken into water and O2.
Saturated fatty acids have no double bonds between the individual carbon atoms of the fatty acid chain; the chain of carbon atoms is fully "saturated" with hydrogen atoms.A fat molecule is monounsaturated if it contains one double bond, and polyunsaturated if it contains more than one double bond; where double bonds are formed, hydrogen atoms are eliminated
No
they add hydrogen to unsaturated fats.
Removal would cause the atom to change from an atom would change it into an atom of the element with an atomic number one less. Now what happens next? It depends on whether the isotope of the element you have just made is stable. If not it will undergo radioactive decay. (Note hydrogen would of course disappear if you removed 1 proton and 1 electron)
they add hydrogen to unsaturated fats.
Revocation by the patient
they add hydrogen to unsaturated fats.