Glycosidic bonds by a condensation reaction froms a Disaccharide of glucose, however many of those of course makes up the polysaccharide. And cellulose is a polysac....
However, if you want to know how, many of cellulose keep themselves together in groups then the answer would be HYDROGENBONDS.
The bonds are covalent.
A dye can bond with cellulose fibers through a chemical process called absorption dyeing. This involves forming strong chemical bonds between the dye molecules and the cellulose, resulting in the coloration of the material.
Cellulose. Cellulose is a polymer of glucose molecules. It is different from starch or glycogen due to the type of bond between the glucose molecules.
Metals have metallic bonds.
Yes, cellulose is present in the cell wall of a plant.
The bond type present in the molecule CH2Cl2 is a covalent bond.
The type of bond present in the nucleotide that involves the selection of the phosphate ester (phosphoester) bond is a covalent bond.
Ionic bond
ionic bond
yes cellulose is present
Aluminium oxide has an ionic bond.
Your instruction huh
The bond between nitrogen and oxygen in this compound is a double bond which is covalent.
Cellulose has beta-glycosidic bonds between its glucose molecules, which are linked in a linear chain through dehydration synthesis reactions. These bonds are strong and require specific enzymes to break down the cellulose structure.
"covalent" OR "covalent bond"
The bonds are covalent.
A dye can bond with cellulose fibers through a chemical process called absorption dyeing. This involves forming strong chemical bonds between the dye molecules and the cellulose, resulting in the coloration of the material.