| If lecithin is suspended in hot water, it forms a monolayer on 
              the surface that is similar to that found with soaps and long-chain 
              alcohols. If a loop of wire or a thin metal plate with a hole is 
              pushed down through this film, a lipid bilayer will be formed within 
              the loop or hole, as diagrammed on the right. In the original surface 
              film, the polar heads of the molecules were underneath, in contact 
              with water. The hydrocarbon tails were above, exposed to the air. 
             The lecithin bilayer formed at the opening in the plate will have 
              the structure shown right, with polar heads exposed on either face 
              of the bilayer and hydrophobic chains meeting at the center. Such 
              a bilayer made with chains the length of stearic acid will be 70 
              Å thick, similar to biological membranes. Lecithin bilayers 
              are like soap films turned inside out. Both are bilayers of half 
              hydrophobic and half polar molecules.  Soap films, in contact with air on either side, have their hydrophobic 
              chains exposed and their polar heads immersed in a layer of water 
              in the center of the film. Lipid bilayers in aqueous solution have 
              their molecules in the reversed position-hydrophobic portion in 
              the center and polar heads out.
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