Polymers C
Polymers C
Introduction to Polymers
.
You may think of polymers as being a relatively modern
invention however, naturally occurring polymers have been
used for thousands of years.
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INTRODUCTION TO POLYMERS
1. Thermoplastics:
Can be processed by melting and cooling.
- several cycles are possible for thermally stabilized polymers
Ex. PS, PE, PP, PVC, PET
PP
PVC
PET
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CLASSIFICATION OF POLYMERS
2. Thermosets:
Cannot be melted or dissolved to be processed; chemical
decomposition occurs before softening.
3. Rubber (Elastomers)
Ex. Styrene-butadiene
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MOLECULAR FORCES IN POLYMERS
hydrogen bridges
- stronger than VW
- present in polar polymers like poly amides and polyester
The polymer chain can bend, twist, and kink into many shapes.
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Structural properties of
linear polymers:
1. conformational flexibility
2. strength
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Cross linking adds
tensile strength
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BASIC POLYMER STRUCTURE
--X--X--X--X--X--X--X--X--X--X--X--X
--X--W--X--W--X--W--X--W--X--W--XW
-X--X--X--W--X--W--X--XW--X--W-W
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Model for graft co-polymer:
A polymer is grafted to another preformed macromolecule
ex. Impact resistant PS branches on polybutadiene rubber
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STRUCTURE OF POLYMERS
Polyvinyl chloride: (the mer unit is C2H3Cl)
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METHODS FOR MAKING POLYMERS
1. Addition polymerization
2. Condensation polymerization
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Free-Radical Addition Polymerization of
Ethylene
H2C CH2
200 C O2
2000 atm peroxides
polyethylene
Free-Radical Polymerization of Propene
H2C CHCH3
CH CH CH CH CH CH CH
CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3 CH3
polypropylene
..
RO
.. Mechanism
H2C CHCH3
..
RO: Mechanism
H2C CHCH3
..
RO: Mechanism
H2C CHCH3
H2C CHCH3
..
RO: Mechanism
H2C CHCH3
H2C CHCH3
..
RO: Mechanism
H2C CHCH3
H2C CHCH3
H2C CHCH3
..
RO: Mechanism
H2C CHCH3
H2C CHCH3
H2C CHCH3
..
RO: Mechanism
H2C CHCH3
H2C CHCH3
H2C CHCH3
H2C CHCH3
Likewise...
F2C=CF2 Teflon
A polymer made
form just one
monomer is
polyethylene. It
is the most
common plastic
you see.
It is used for
bottles, buckets,
jugs, containers,
toys, even
synthetic
lumber, and
many other
things.
There are two types of
polyethylene polymers
(plastics). One is when
the polyethylene exists as
long straight chains. The
picture here shows the
chains of one carbon with
two hydrogen atoms
repeating. The chain can
be as long as 20,000
carbons to 35,000
carbons. This is called
high density polyethylene
(HDPE).
When the chains get up to
500,000 carbons long, they
are tough enough for
synthetic ice, replacement
joints, and bullet-proof vests.
Think about it. You start
with ethylene gas molecules
that can't stop a feather from
passing through them. But
after the double-bond of one
ethylene molecule breaks, it
causes a chain reaction that
connects thousands to it. In
less than a second, these
long straight chains of
carbon and hydrogen are
strong enough to stop a
bullet or play ice hockey on.
Isn't chemistry wonderful.
We've mentioned high density polyethylene (HDPE); you
probably were thinking, there must be low density polyethylene
(LDPE). You are correct. It is made by causing the long chains
of ethylene to branch. That way they cannot lie next each
other, which reduces the density and strength of the
polyethylene. This makes the plastic lighter and more flexible.
Low density polyethylene is used to make
plastic bags, plastic wrap, and squeeze bottles,
plus many other things.
Another polymer, which is almost the same as
polyethylene, is PolyVinyl Chloride or PVC.
The difference is that every other hydrogen is
replaced with a chlorine atom (green sphere).
(CH2CHCl)n + O2 CO2 + CO + HCl + H2O
PVC pipes are used in our homes
and they are even handy for making
a table or chair. PVC is also used as
insulation around electric wires in the
home and the automobile. PVC is
quite safe until it burns. The
chlorines in the PVC combine with
the hydrogen atoms in the PVC to
form hydrogen chloride gas (HCl).
When this contacts water in lungs or
mouth, it turns to hydrochloric acid
(HCl(aq)).
There are many types of plastics, but they all are based on taking one or two
small molecules and starting a chain reaction that connects hundreds or
thousands of these small molecules into long chains or branching chains. By
controlling the length and the branching, you can control the final hardness
or flexibility of the polymer plus qualities like resistance to solvents, acids, or
heat.
Condensation polymerization
Monomers
O OH
O
OH
Q uickTim e and a
Phot o - JPEG decom pr essor
ar e needed t o see t his pict ur e.
hexamethylene diamine
nylon
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Nylon is used in clothes,
shoes, jackets, belts, and
accessories. Its not
surprising a magazine is
named after this polymer.
Where did nylon get its
name?
Supramolecular
Structure of
nylon
Intermolecular
hydrogen bonds
give nylon
enormous tensile
strength
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Polyester is a
another
copolymer. It
is made from
equal amounts
of two different
monomers.
Polyester is
used to make
bottles and
fabrics.
Polyester is made from the two monomers, terephthalic acid (note: ph is
silent) and ethylene glycol (car antifreeze). This makes a popular plastic
called PETE, which is short for Polyethylene Terephthalate. The synthesis
is also a dehydration reaction because water is given off.
PETE
O
H O C
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Proteins: amino acid monomers
HO NH2
H
O R
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Three D representation of the structure of a protein
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DNA
Thymine (T)
The monomers:
Adenine (A)
Cytosine (C)
Guanine (G)
Phosphate-
Sugar (backbone) of
DNA
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Phosphate-
sugar
backbone
holds the DNA
macromolecule
together
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One strand
unwinds to
duplicate its
complement via a
polymerization of
the monomers
C, G, A and T
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Carbohydrates
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Cotton fiber is mostly cellulose, and
cellulose is made of chains of the sugar,
glucose linked together a certain way.
Glucose Glucose
Two ring-shape
Structural formula.
versions
Straight chain
glucose
H-C=O
1 Glucose Used in
glucose bending making
|2 starch
H-C-OH
|
3 flips
HO-C-H either
| bends way
4 alpha-glucose
H-C-OH
|5
H-C-OH
|6 Used in
CH2OH making
cellulose
Glucose bends itself into 4
different shapes millions of
times a second beta-glucose
POLYMER ADDITIVES
Mechanical, chemical, and physical Properties can be modified by
additives:
Fillers
Improve tensile and compressive strengths, abrasion resistance,
toughness, and thermal stability
sand, glass, clay, talc (eg. carbon in tires)
Particle sizes range from very small (10 nm) to large (mm)
Plasticizers
small molecules which occupy positions between polymer chains hence
increase distance and interactions between chains.
increases flexibility, ductility, and toughness
reduces hardness and stiffness
Stabilizers
UV resistance of C-C bonds
Oxidation resistance
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Colorants and Flame Retardants
POLYMER RECYCLING