The Structure and Properties of Polymers

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The Structure and Properties of Polymers Also known as Bonding + Properties

description

The Structure and Properties of Polymers. Also known as Bonding + Properties. Mer –  The repeating unit in a polymer chain Monomer – Polymer –  Many mer - units along a chain A polymer is an organic material and the backbone of every organic material is a chain of carbon atoms. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Structure and Properties of Polymers

Page 1: The Structure and Properties of Polymers

The Structure and Properties of PolymersAlso known as

Bonding +Properties

Page 2: The Structure and Properties of Polymers

• Mer –  The repeating unit in a polymer chain– Monomer –

• Polymer –  Many mer -units along a chain

• A polymer is an organic material and the backbone of every organic material is a chain of carbon atoms.

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What is a polymer?

• A long molecule made up from lots of small molecules called

• monomers.

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• A polymer is composed of many simple molecules that are repeating structural units called monomers.

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• A single polymer molecule may consist of hundreds to a million monomers and may have a linear, branched, or network structure.

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• Covalent bonds hold the atoms in the polymer molecules together.– secondary bonds then hold groups of polymer

chains together to form the polymeric material.

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• Copolymers are polymers composed of two or more different types of monomers.

•A B

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Copolymerisation• when more than one monomer is used.

– An irregular chain structure will result eg propene/ethene/propene/propene/ethene

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• The carbon atom has four electrons in the outer shell.

• Each of these valence electrons can form a covalent bond to another carbon atom or to a foreign atom.

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• The key to the polymer structure is that two carbon atoms can have up to three common bonds and still bond with other atoms.

• The elements found most frequently in polymers are: – H, F, Cl, Bf, and I with 1 valence electron; – O and S with 2 valence electrons; – C and Si with 4 valence electrons.

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Consider the material polyethylene, which is made

from ethane gas, C2H6.

• Ethane gas has a two carbon atoms in the chain and each of the two carbon atoms share two valence electrons with the other.

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Biopolymers

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Polymer Chains (Thermoplastics and

Thermosets)

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Types of polymers• Commodity plastics• PE = Polyethylene• PS = Polystyrene• PP = Polypropylene• PVC = Poly(vinyl chloride)• PET = Poly(ethylene terephthalate)• Specialty or Engineering Plastics• Teflon (PTFE) = Poly(tetrafluoroethylene)• PC = Polycarbonate (Lexan)• Polyesters and Polyamides (Nylon)

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All the same monomer

• Monomers all same type (A) – A + A + A + A – -A-A-A-A-

• eg poly(ethene) polychloroethene PVC

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Different monomers

• Monomers of two different types A + B

• A + B + A + B• -A-B-A-B-• eg polyamides • polyesters

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Addition polymerisation

• Monomers contain C=C bonds– Double bond opens to (link) bond to next

monomer molecule• Chain forms when same basic unit is

repeated over and over.– Modern polymers also developed based on

alkynes R-C C - R’

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General form and structure of Carbon-based polymers

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Thermoplastics (80%)

• No cross links between chains.• Weak attractive forces between chains broken by

warming.• Change shape - can be remoulded.• Weak forces reform in new shape when cold.

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Thermosets

• Extensive cross-linking formed by covalent bonds.

• Bonds prevent chains moving relative to each other.

• What will the properties of this type of plastic be like?

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Longer chains make stronger polymers.

• Critical length needed before strength increases.

• Hydrocarbon polymers average of 100 repeating units necessary but only 40 for nylons.

• Tensile strength measures the forces needed to snap a polymer.

• More tangles + more touching!!!

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Crystalline polymers• Areas in polymer where chains

packed in regular way.• Both amorphous and crystalline

areas in same polymer.• Crystalline - regular chain

structure - no bulky side groups.

• More crystalline polymer - stronger and less flexible.

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Cold-drawing

• When a polymer is stretched a ‘neck’ forms.– What happens to the chains in the ‘neck’?

• Cold drawing is used to increase a polymers’ strength. – Why then do the handles of plastic carrier bags snap if you fill

them full of tins of beans?