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multiple choice 1 point what often occurs to hydrocarbon chains in an aqueous solution? the branching characteristics of the chain changes their chain length changes the placement of double covalent bonds changes they change from a linear to a ring structure
Hydrocarbon chains in aqueous solutions tend to alter their branching to minimize interactions with water (hydrophobic effect), which drives them to adopt more compact, branched conformations. The other options do not represent a common change in aqueous environments: chain length is fixed for a given hydrocarbon, double bond placement does not shift spontaneously in solution, and linear-to-ring structural changes do not typically occur in aqueous conditions for most hydrocarbons.
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The branching characteristics of the chain changes