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Published byWendy Farmer Modified over 9 years ago
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More Complex Polymers and Recycling
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Different States Different parts of a plastic may be ordered or random
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Different States Different parts of a plastic may be ordered or random Ordered is crystalline Random is a glass structure Since most polymers have a random structure –Cold – glass state –Warm – rubber state Glass transition temperature, T g, separates
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T g ’s Polystyrene - 100°C – plastic utensils LDPE - -100°C – soft plastics –Melts at 108°C Natural rubber – way below 0°C – tires Polyester - 73°C – non-wrinkle fabrics
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Natural Rubber Monomer is cis - isoprene Slowly flows and is sticky 1839 – Charles Goodyear discovered vulcanization –X-linking with sulfur –Elastomer Synthetic rubber, hard and brittle – trans –True synthetic (cis) not until 1955
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Monomers Natural rubber Neoprene Polybutadiene
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Conducting polymers Alternating single and double bonds in chain –Example polyacetylene or polyethyne Conduction can be directional –Along chains but not across
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Recycling Solid waste: 4 lbs / person per day –For 250 million people in US – 1 billion lbs/day Make up of garbage?
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40 % by volume 20 % by volume
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Recycling Solid waste: 4 lbs / person per day –For 250 million people in US – 1 billion lbs/day Make up of garbage? In order to recycle, 4 things needed: –Collection –Sorting –Reclamation –End-use Problems for plastic Problems for paper
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Amount Recycled Aluminum cans – 65% Paper – 20% Glass – 10% Plastic – 3% - Why? –Economics –Sorting Plastic container codes
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H14 – C5 16, 19 - 21, 24 - 26, 28 - 30, 57 - 60, 65, 73
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