The components of a lipid molecule are CH2 monomers in the Tail, and a carboxylic acid at it's Head End.
Yes, proteins have monomers called amino acids, lipids do not have monomers, carbohydrates have monomers called monosaccharides, and nucleic acids have monomers called nucleotides.
monomers for carbohydrates is monosaccharides simple sugar. monomer for lipids is 3 fatty acids
That are the lipids. They have fatty acids and glucerols
The most common example is lipids.
Glycerol and 3 fatty acids is the monomer of a lipid.This is also the basic structure of a lipid.
The monomers of lipids are fatty acids.
The monomers that make up lipids are fatty acids and glycerol.
lipids
Yes, proteins have monomers called amino acids, lipids do not have monomers, carbohydrates have monomers called monosaccharides, and nucleic acids have monomers called nucleotides.
monomers for carbohydrates is monosaccharides simple sugar. monomer for lipids is 3 fatty acids
Lipids do not have monomers and they themselves are the polymer
The building blocks of lipids, known as lipid monomers, are fatty acids.
That are the lipids. They have fatty acids and glucerols
The question makes no sense.
Lipids do not have monomers and they themselves are the polymer
The polymers of lipids are simply its monomers (fatty acids and glycerol) connected
Lipids do not have monomers because they are made up of diverse molecules like fatty acids, glycerol, and other components, rather than repeating units like monomers found in polymers.