An unsaturated fat because some of the carbons along it's length are double bonded and kinked.
Triglycerides are the lipids that contain the maximum number of carbon and hydrogen possible. They consist of a glycerol molecule and three fatty acid chains, which can vary in length but typically contain long hydrocarbon chains with many carbon and hydrogen atoms.
No. Lipids with the maximum number of hydrogen atoms are referred to as saturated.
No. Lipid molecules that are unsaturated have less hydrogen atoms because of carbon-carbon double bonds.
saturated molecule
Just one.
Triglycerides are the lipids that contain the maximum number of carbon and hydrogen possible. They consist of a glycerol molecule and three fatty acid chains, which can vary in length but typically contain long hydrocarbon chains with many carbon and hydrogen atoms.
No. Lipids with the maximum number of hydrogen atoms are referred to as saturated.
An example of a saturated hydrocarbon is methane (CH4), which consists of single bonds between carbon and hydrogen atoms and contains the maximum number of hydrogen atoms possible for its carbon atoms.
No. Lipid molecules that are unsaturated have less hydrogen atoms because of carbon-carbon double bonds.
They have the maximum number of hydrogen atoms.
three
A nucleus of a hydrogen atom contains a single proton; therefore, the atomic number of hydrogen is 1.
Alkanes have the most possible number of hydrogen atoms with respect to the carbon again.
Octane is saturated because it contains only single carbon-carbon bonds, meaning that each carbon atom is bonded to the maximum number of hydrogen atoms possible.
The molar mass of hydrogen is 2.
After it has lost an electron, a hydrogen ion contains one proton and a variable number of neutrons depending on the isotope (usually none).
saturated molecule