Amphiphilic polymers are heterogeneous with both hydrophilic and hydrophobic parts.
Yes, it is correct.
Most likely, yes. It has a weakly-basic amine head group (cationic-hydrophilic) and a heterocyclic tail group that would be expected to give hydrophobic character to the molecule, making the molecule both cationic and amphiphilic.
they are called polymers
Polymers.
The answer is polymer. Could also be referring to Macromolecule
Xiao-Hua Liu has written: 'Langmuir-Blodgett studies of amphiphilic liquid crystals and polymers'
Yes, it is correct.
Most likely, yes. It has a weakly-basic amine head group (cationic-hydrophilic) and a heterocyclic tail group that would be expected to give hydrophobic character to the molecule, making the molecule both cationic and amphiphilic.
No, oil is generally considered hydrophobic rather than amphiphilic. This means that oil molecules do not have both hydrophilic (water-attracting) and hydrophobic (water-repelling) parts like amphiphilic molecules do.
No. Because the polar hydroxyls of glycerol and the polar carboxylates of the fatty acids are bound in ester linkages, triglycerides are nonpolar, hydrophobic molecules, that are essentially insoluble in water.
Water soluble polymers are polymers that will dissolve in water.
they are called polymers
Amphipathic molecules have both hydrophilic (water-loving) and hydrophobic (water-fearing) parts in their structure, while amphiphilic molecules have both hydrophobic and hydrophilic parts that are separate. Both types of molecules interact with water, but amphipathic molecules tend to form structures like micelles or bilayers, while amphiphilic molecules may form emulsions or monolayers.
Polymers.
The polymers of carbohydrates are polysaccharide.
Synthetic polymers are cheaper than natural polymers. Natural polymers are also less plentiful.
The answer is polymer. Could also be referring to Macromolecule