No. Mono-glyceride, di-glyceride and tri-glyceride are pristine examples of compounds - none of which are nucleic acids.
polymer
A lipid is both a polymer and monomer. Polymer: Triglyceride Monomers: glycerol and fatty acids
A phospholipid is not a polymer.
Chocolate is not a polymer.
No. Mono-glyceride, di-glyceride and tri-glyceride are pristine examples of compounds - none of which are nucleic acids.
Mw/Mn=1 Mono disperse Polymer sample consisting of molecules all of which have the same chain length Mw/Mn>1 Poly disperse Polymer consisting of molecules with the variety of chain length.
the pre-fix mono means one the pre-fix poly means many
a glyceride
Most conductive polymers are prepared by oxidative coupling of mono-cyclic precursors. Such reactions entail dehydrogenation
A monomer is a single unit that can join together with other monomers to form a polymer. Think of a monomer as the "one" building block, and a polymer as the "many" units created by linking multiple monomers together through chemical bonds.
A monomer (from Greek mono "one" and meros "part") is a molecule that may bind chemically to other molecules to form a polymer.
Monomers are the building blocks that are used to make polymers. Remember: mono = one, poly = many Monomers are like the links in a chain and polymers are like the chain. Many chain links (monomers) make up a whole chain (polymer)
A palmitin is a solid crystallizable fat found in animal and vegetable tissues which is a glyceride of palmitic acid.
last time my teacher just said their mono. Buddhism is the one that's poly.
Mono is like single or alone, so it's mono mono, all my life I'll be mono, I'm alone and it's good to me, mono, from love I run away, mono... That's the chorus atleast
polymer