saturates
Saturates is a term used in different scientific contexts, most commonly in organic chemistry and nutrition. In organic chemistry, saturates refer to saturated hydrocarbons, a class that includes alkanes. These compounds consist entirely of carbon atoms connected by single bonds and carry the maximum possible number of hydrogen atoms for a given carbon framework. The general formula for acyclic alkanes is CnH2n+2. Saturates are typically nonpolar, relatively chemically inert, and undergo reactions such as combustion and substitution rather than addition to multiple bonds. They range from simple gases like methane to long-chain solids, and their physical properties—melting and boiling points—increase with increasing chain length. Branched isomers have different melting points and volatility compared with their straight-chain counterparts.
In nutrition, saturates refers to saturated fats, fats composed mainly of saturated fatty acids with no carbon–carbon
Overall, the term saturates captures two related but distinct ideas: the chemistry of hydrogen-saturated hydrocarbons with