The carbonyl group, -COOH, makes a molecule acidic.
TO help visualize the molecule
Hydrogen bonding between the carbonyl oxygen and the hydrogen on the amine group make it more difficult to break up Nylons, thus higher melting temperature than other polymers. this answer was copied from ID2176515335
homozygous and heterozygoues
glucose. it is broken in the cytoplasm
It is possible to use control group in a sentence as long as it does make sense.
The carbonyl group consists of a carbon atom bonded to an oxygen atom by a double bond (C=O). It is a functional group found in various compounds such as aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, and esters.
The carbonyl group is composed of a carbon atom doubly bonded to an oxygen atom. This functional group is commonly found in aldehydes and ketones, where the carbon is also bonded to at least one other atom or group.
It is organic if the molecule contains carbon-hydrogen bonds. If none of these bonds are present in the molecule, it is inorganic.
carboxly group+amino group+side chain
Example of elements forming carbonyls: Fe, Ni, Rh, Mn, Ti, Cr etc.
Totally different compounds. Glycerol doesnt have any nitrogen whereas glycine does for example. Glycine is 1 of the 20 amino acids that make up proteins. look at them in wikipedia. Glycerol (C3H8O3) , glycine (C2H5NO2)
Yes, aldehyde is a structural isomer of a ketone. Both aldehydes and ketones contain a carbonyl group, but in aldehydes, the carbonyl group is located at the end of the carbon chain, while in ketones, it is located within the carbon chain.
ATP synthase
A chemical formula provides information about the types and numbers of atoms present in a molecule. It tells you the elements that make up the molecule and their ratios.
Per every water molecule, there are 2 hydrogen atoms and 1 oxygen atom. These atoms make up a water molecule.
The backbone of the DNA molecule consists of a sugar, deoxyribose and a phosphate group. --(sugars and phosphates)
No, the hydroxyl group is not basic. It is a functional group that contains an oxygen atom bonded to a hydrogen atom, and its presence in a molecule does not make it basic. The basicity of a molecule is determined by the presence of basic functional groups such as amino groups.