Title: Structures and properties of polymers
1Structures and properties of polymers
2Condensation polymers
- Polymers formed by condensation reaction thats
used to make esters - Need at least two suitable functional groups per
monomer - Terylene- a polyester - is a typical condensation
polymer
3Condensation polymers
- Nylon Terylene linear polymers ideal for
making fibres - Nylon polyamide formed from condensation of a
dicarboxylic acid and a diamine - Water is eliminated when nylon is formed
-
4How polymers are effected by temperature changes
- Heats solids made of small molecules melt to
form liquid an eventually boil - Polymers not so simple
- E.g. rubber cooled in liquid nitrogen becomes
brittle and can be smashed - It becomes GLASSY
- poly(propene) becomes brittle at about -10 C
- Structure of many polymers mixture of ordered
areas (crystalline) and random (amorphous) - In glassy state the amorphous regions become
frozen so cant cant change shape if it has to
move it does so breaking
5How polymers are effected by temperature changes
- If you heat the glassy material, polymer chains
reach a temp at which they move relative to each
other. This is the glass transistion temperature
(Tg) - When polymer is warmer than this, we see the
typical plastic properties we expect-
6How polymers are effected by temperature changes
- On further heating we reach the melting
temperature (Tm) - The crystalline regions break down and polymer
becomes a viscous fluid - These processes are reversible for thermoplastics
7How polymers are effected by temperature changes
8How polymers are effected by temperature changes
- Todays polymers are designed to have Tg and Tm
values which are suitable for the manufacturers
needs
9Matching polymer properties to needs
- Different polymers with different uses need
polymers with different Tg - Two important ways of changing Tg is by using
copolymerisation and plasticisers
10Matching polymer properties to needs
- Different polymers with different uses need
polymers with different Tg - Two important ways of changing Tg is by using
copolymerisation and plasticisers
11Matching polymer properties to needs
- Pure poly(chloroethene)- PVC has a Tg of about 80
C rigid and quite brittle at room temp - Used to make drain pipes
- Sometimes called unplasticised PVC or uPVC
- To make it more flexible the Tg needs to be
lowered. - One way of doing this is to copolymerise the
chloroethene with a small amount of ethenyl
ethanoate
12Matching polymer properties to needs
- Introduces different side groups into the polymer
chain - Chains pack together less well attractive
forces are weaker - Polymer is more flexible because the chains can
move over one another more easily
13Matching polymer properties to needs
- Another way is to use a molecular lubricant a
plasticiser - Allows the PVC chains to slide over each other
more easily - Diagram shows a plasticiser in place beween two
polymers
14Matching polymer properties to needs
- Plasticiser have to be chosen very carefully so
they are compatible with the polymer - Di-(2-ethylhexyl)hexandioate is commonly used as
a plasticiser for PVC - Important that the plasticisers added to cling
film dont dissolve in fatty food as they may be
harmful to health
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