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  • Hydrogen: The Key Element Saturating Fatty Acid Chains - Chemistry Explained
    The element that saturates the carbon chain of a fatty acid is hydrogen.

    Here's why:

    * Saturated fatty acids have all the carbon atoms in their chain bonded to the maximum number of hydrogen atoms possible.

    * Unsaturated fatty acids have one or more double or triple bonds between carbon atoms, meaning there are fewer hydrogen atoms attached.

    So, to saturate a fatty acid, you need to add hydrogen atoms to break any double or triple bonds and create single bonds with hydrogen instead.

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