Lipid are nonpolar molecules that is not soluble in water.
Yes. When mixed with water in a solution it forms an organic layer ontop of the aqueous (water) layer.
Carbon dioxide compared to oxygen is more soluble in water. CO2 reacts with water to form carbonic acid, H2CO3. This explains its high solubility in water.
Oxygenated water is a chemical compound (H2O2) not a solute or solvent. Of course, H2O2 can be a solvent for other compounds but impurities decompose in very short time H2O2.
Lipid is a heterogeneous group of compound which are soluble in organic solvents but in soluble in water. Important groups of lipids are fats , oils, triacyl glycerol; phospholipids, waxes and terpenes including steroids and carotenoids.This last group ie carotenoids and steroids is the lipid that are not made up of fatty acid but they are composed of isoprenoid units, their examples are cholestrole and red pigment carotin of carrots.
lipid soluble
yes, estrogen is a lipid soluble hormone.
Oxygen is lipid soluble therefore it can pass directly through the cell membranes of the capillaries.
are compounds being packaged lipid-soluble or lipid-insoluble in the golgi body
They are water soluble
As the bilayer contains hydrophobic fatty acid tails, water-soluble molecules cannot diffuse directly through. However, lipid soluble molecules such as oxygen can diffuse directly through. Overall, for a molecule to be able to diffuse directly through it must be lipid-soluble, relatively small and non-polar.
Careful, there are actually two biochemical Forms of Vitamins - call them Classes: 1) Water soluble, and 2) Lipid soluble.
Vitamin A is lipid soluble.
No. It is a water soluble amine.
Lipid-soluble because water spreads poison ivy
Lipids (fat-soluble), they can therefore be administered orally.
Yes;opiates are lipid(fat) soluble