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Chapter 8 Sections 2 and 3 Chapter 4 Section 5
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Monomers- smaller molecules that join together to make polymers
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Natural Polymers found in nature, ex. Cellulose (cell walls), starch (plant sugar), glycogen (animal sugar), silk, wool, proteins
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Synthetic Polymers man made, not natural, ex. plastics, nylon, polyester, laminate flooring, teflon, CDs
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Sometimes the polymer chains get up to 500,000 carbons long. Here they are tough enough for synthetic ice, replacement joints and bullet-proof vests. This is called Ultra High Molecular Weight PolyEthylene or UHMWPE. 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 aligned next to each other are strong enough to stop a bullet or play ice hockey on. Isn't chemistry wonderful?
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Composite Combining two or more polymers, each with specific useful properties, into one new substance that is better than either polymer was individually Examples –Natural- wood –Synthetic- fiberglass, kevlar
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Nuclear Reactions Radioactive decay- when the nucleus in an unstable isotope releases fast moving particles and energy Types: alpha ( α), beta ( β ), gamma ( γ )
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Alpha Radiation α –nucleus loses 2 protons, 2 neutrons and energy (sometimes called a Helium nucleus) –decreases the atomic mass of the element by 4 –decreases the atomic number by 2 (element changes new element) –protection requires thin material like paper
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Beta Radiation β –nucleus loses 1 neutron and energy, the neutron breaks into a proton and an electron, only the proton remains in the nucleus –the atomic mass of the element doesnt change –increases the atomic number by 1 (element changes new element) –protection requires thin layer of plastic or metal like aluminum foil
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Gamma Radiation γ –gives off extremely high amounts of energy –protection requires a meter of concrete or 6 inches of lead
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Half-Life length of time needed for half the atoms of a sample to decay example- original sample has 32 grams of carbon-14 (half-life is 5,730 years) after 1 half-life, only 16 grams of carbon-14 remain after 2 half-lives, only 8 grams of carbon-14 remain after 3 half-lives only 4 grams of carbon-14 remain the time needed for the sample to decay from 32 g to 4 g is 5,730 x 3 = 17,190 years.
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