Syllabus Edition

First teaching 2023

First exams 2025

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Fatty Acids (SL IB Biology)

Revision Note

Cara Head

Author

Cara Head

Expertise

Biology

Fatty Acids

  • Both triglycerides and phospholipids contain glycerol with molecules known as fatty acids attached
  • These fatty acids have long hydrocarbon ‘tails’
    • Hydrocarbons are molecules that contain hydrogen and carbon
  • Fatty acids occur in two forms:
    • Saturated fatty acids
    • Unsaturated fatty acids
      • Unsaturated fatty acids can be monounsaturated or polyunsaturated

Saturated fatty acids

  • In saturated fatty acids the bonds between the carbon atoms in the hydrocarbon tail are all single bonds
  • The fatty acid is said to be ‘saturated’ with hydrogen
    • This means that each carbon atom in the hydrocarbon tail (except for the final carbon atom) is bonded to two hydrogen atoms
  • Saturated fatty acids are straight molecules, meaning that lipid molecules containing them are able to pack tightly together
    • This increases their melting point and causes them to be solid at room temperature
    • Saturated fatty acids are often used as storage molecules in animals for this reason, e.g. the fats in meat and butter

Saturated fatty acid diagram

[Saturated fatty acid example.png], downloadable AS & A Level Biology revision notes

Saturated fatty acids contain only single carbon-carbon bonds

Unsaturated fatty acids

  • In unsaturated fatty acids the bonds between the carbon atoms in the hydrocarbon tail are not all single bonds
    • The fatty acid is said to be ‘unsaturated’ because the hydrocarbon tail does not contain the maximum number of hydrogen atoms possible; each carbon atom in a carbon-carbon double bond can only bond to one hydrogen atom instead of two
  • These double bonds can cause the hydrocarbon tail of unsaturated fatty acids to kink, or bend, meaning they are not as straight as saturated fatty acids
    • Unsaturated fatty acids cannot pack as tightly together as saturated fatty acids, so fats containing unsaturated fatty acids are often liquids at room temperature
  • Unsaturated fatty acids contain at least one carbon-carbon double bond
    • A fatty acid with one C=C double bond is known as monounsaturated fatty acid
      • Lipids that contain monounsaturated fatty acids have a lower melting point than saturated fatty acids, meaning that they form liquid oils; some animals and plants store energy in the form of oils
    • In some unsaturated fatty acids, there are many carbon-carbon double bonds; these are known as polyunsaturated fatty acids
      • Lipids containing polyunsaturated fats also have a low melting point, so form oils that are used for energy storage in plants

Mono- & polyunsaturated fatty acid diagrams

Unsaturated fatty acidpolyunsaturated fatty acid

Monounsaturated fatty acids (top) contain only one carbon-carbon double bond, while polyunsaturated fatty acids (bottom) contain more than one

Exam Tip

You should be able to recognise from a diagram whether a fatty acid is saturated, monounsaturated or polyunsaturated (look for any carbon-carbon double bonds)!

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