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Chapter 16 Polymeric Materials
Monomers and Polymers Linear and Branched Polymers Types of Polymerization Addition Polymerization Condensation Polymers Extensively Cross-Linked Polymers (SKIP) Three-Dimensional Structure Polymers (SKIP p top) 1 1
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Chapter 16 Polymeric Materials
Polymer Nomenclature - Monomers and Polymers Definitions of polymer, monomer, plastic, thermoplastic and thermoset plastic in “handout” repeat units, average degree of polymerization Polymer Architecture - Linear and Branched Polymers See handout for depiction of linear, branched, star, comb, ladder and cross-linked networks Polymer Morphology ordered = crystalline regions random = amorphous regions Polymer properties and transitions Modulus (degree of hardness/softness) Glass Transition Temperature (transition from glassy to rubbery) Melt Temperature(transition to viscous flow) 3 2
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Chapter 16 Polymeric Materials
Types of Polymerization Addition (also called chain-growth) Radical (three steps – initiation, propagation, termination) Cationic Anionic (called “ living” polymer, can make block co-polymers) Condensation (also called step-growth) loss of water Polyester Polyamide Polycarbonate Polyurethane Epoxy resins Polysaccharides (starch) Polypeptides and proteins 3 4
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Chapter 16 Polymeric Materials
Addition Polymerization Radical Polymerization 3 steps (initiation, propagation, and termination) see handout Ionic Polymerization cationic anionic (living polymers, useful to make “block” co-polymers) Cross-Linking in Polymers (can use bi-functional, tri functional, quadri-functional monomers) Heteroatom-Containing Addition Polymers Polyols can not make polyvinyl alcohol from vinyl alcohol, instead polymerize vinyl acetate and then hydrolyze to polyvinylalcohol Polyethers (e.g., poly(ethylene glycol) Polyacetals (e.g., paraformaldehyde from formaldehyde) 3 5
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Chapter 16 Polymeric Materials
Condensation Polymers Polyesters (from a dicarboxylic acid and diol) Polysaccharides (from carbohydrate (or sugar) condensation) Polyamides (from dicarboxylic acid and diamine) Polypeptides (from20 common amino acids) Polyurethanes (form bis-isocyanate and diol) 3 6
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Chapter 16 Polymeric Materials
Three-Dimensional Structure of Polymers Polypropylene (SKIP pages top) Naturally Occurring Polypeptides Primary structure - amino acid sequence Secondary structure -pleated - deviation from planarity due to steric interactions -helix - hydrogen bonding from peptide units in the same chain Tertiary structure - spatially dispersed -pleated and -helix Quaternary structure - several polypeptides form a complex Cellulose and Starch Starch from -glucose (axial C1-OH group) Cellulose from -glucose (equatorial C1-OH group) 3 8
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Chapter 16 Polymeric Materials
Review of Reactions Be able to draw the basic polymerization mechanism for radical, anionic, cationic general condensation polymerization for a polyester, polyamide, polyurethane, polypeptide Review Problems Especially review problem 16.1 Know nomenclature of synthetic and natural polymers Know how to identify repeat units 3 9
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Chapter 16 Polymeric Materials
Summary Definitions for polymer, monomer, plastic, thermoplastic, thermoset, melt temperature, glass transition temp. Nomenclature for simple addition and condensation polymers Linkages between monomers include C-C bonds in vinyl polymers C-O bonds in polyesters, polyacetals, polyethers, polysaccharides C-N bonds in polyamides, polypeptides Role of Hydrogen bonding in nitrogen and oxygen containing polymers intermolecular H-bonding in pleated peptides intramolecular H-bonding in helix peptide structures primary, secondary, tertiary and quaternary structures 3 10
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