Polymers Test 1
Polystyrene
"Polystyrene" is atactic polystyrene with optical clarity Syndiotactic polystyrene has great engineering applications of polymer Crystallinity is what gives sPS its good mechanical stability at high temperares
Free Radical Chain Growth
1. Addition takes about 1ms per monomer; So, high molar mass polymer is terminal immediately 2.Steady decrease in monomer, what is present throughout the reaction. Reactions can be done in bulk, where the monomer is the solven 3. Active center/reactive site is critical; not just propagation but chain transfer recombination disproportionation 4. long reaction times != long polymers 5. Raising Temperature != longer polymers
Unsaturated Polymer
2 carbon atoms in "mer" unit are bonded with double bonds
Electronegativity
A measure of the ability of an atom in a chemical compound to attract electrons. It has enormous impact on the secondary bonding forces that drive conformation
Thermosets
A special group of polymers that decompose rather than melt upon heating. They are normally quite brittle due to a relatively rigid, three-dimensional network structure (e.g. polyurethane). *involve a curving process to form a cross linked networks. These cannot be remelted or reformed.
Types of Step Growht Polymerization Reactions
Amide (nylon, kevlar, nomex) Ester Bond Urethane
Where do Chain Growth systems attack?
An alpha-olefin typically has the initiator attack on the beta position because there is greater stability in a secondary carbon
What makes polymerization non-living?
Anything terminates a chain Xn=v_propigation/v_termination v_propigation is the rate of propigation v_temination is the rate of termination KNH2 can be used to terminate chains. The generally, the chain transfer compound takes the active site to and put it on the solvent (like KNH2).
Why do we neglect end groups?
Because they are smaller than other errors in characterization
Polymer Stereochemistry
Bend/backgone configuration with R groups PE is zig-zag in crystalline state alpha-olefins are helical in solid state isotactic polypropylene is the simplest polyolefin to discuss syndiotactic Polystyrene
What are the key building blocks for most polymers
C, H, N, O
Saturated polymer
Carbon atoms in "mer" unit is bonded to 4 other atoms
Thermal polymerization
Chain growth system A purely thermal polymerization is one in which monomer is converted to polymer by thermal energy alone. ... In most cases of self-initiated polymerization, the identity of the initiating radicals and the mechanisms by which they are formed remain obscure. The occurrence of true thermal polymerization can be difficult to establish since trace impurities in the monomers or reaction vessel often prove to be the actual initiators. In most cases of self-initiated polymerization, the identity of the initiating radicals and the mechanisms by which they are formed remain obscure.
Electron donating groups
Groups that push (donate) electron density towards another functional group through sigma or pi bonds. favor cationic polymerization Ex is vinyl ethers
Drying Oils
Highly Unsaturated oils which can cross link and form protective coatings
Heterogeneous chain growth systems
Highly active multiphase. The initator can be unknown
Schotter-Boumann Reaction
Is an interfacial reaction, react sumultaneously and form HCL and nylon Removing membrane allows for reaction to continue at interface From Adipic acid and Hexamethylene diamine
Free Radical Polymerization
Is the dominate polymerization process industrially To achieve long polymer chains, [dot] must be as low as useful, because we know that eventually all the radicals will recombine Addition of a unit is about 1ms
Polypropylene
Isotactic propylene everywhere in food prep/preservation/storage. Isotactic because it is crystalline with a low glass transition temp Atactic is rubbery or elastomeric
Stereoconfigurations
Isotactic-same side of backbone Syndiotactic-every other side of backbone (alternating) Atactic-random Crystalline polymers are isotactic and syndiotactic Amorphous polymers are Atactic Chain growth polyolefins can be all of them
Salt Dehydration
It locks the stoichiometry in place, applying heat removes water and drives products to polymer
Thermoplastics
Materials that can be repeatedly softened by heating and hardened by cooling. Examples include acrylic, pvc, and nylon. *rely on the thermo reversiblitiy for manufactureing and recycling
Mn equation with P
Mn=(Mo)/(1-p)=Mo*Nx
Step Growth equation for Mn
Mn=Summation(Nx*Mx)/Summation(Nx)
diamine
Molecule with two amine groups
diacid
Molecule with two carboxly groups
Copolymers
More than one monomer Linear Copolymers +Statistical (random) +Alternating +Block' +stereo-block +graft
Polydensity Index
Mw/Mn PDI>1 bc more than one chain
Mw equation with P
Mw=Mo*(1+P)/(1-P)
Equation for Mw
Mw=Summation(Mx*Wx)/Summation(Wx) or Mw=Summation(Mx^2*Nx)/Summation(Mx*Nx)
Polyisoprene
Natural rubber is all 1,4-cis configureation polyisoprene This is the cononical example of rubber and latex Rubber is equivalent to a solid with young's modulus of ~10^6Pa Hard Materials ~10^9Pa & higher
Nx
Number of chains for a given length
Extent of reaction
P=(No-N)/No
PDI with P
PDI=Mw/Mn=1+P
Aliphatic
Pertaining to any member of one of the two major groups of organic compounds, those having straight or branched chain structures.
Pgel equation
Pgel=2/fave*(1-1/Xn) If Xn->inf Pgel=2/fave
Poly-Mer
Poly is many Mer is units or peices
Thermodynamics of Chain Growth
Polymerization is exothermic C-C is 350kJ/mol C=C is 600kJ/mol Enthalypy change -30 to -150k/J/mol which free radical systems, this heat must be controlled since the initators are quite often thermally activated If the reaction starts to overheat we can get into positive feedback As polymerization speeds up, viscosity increases and heat transfer gets worse What can we do to cool the reaction?? +The polymerization can be conducted in water. Monomers for these systems are organic and hydrophilic typically +Suspension polymerization ++mm length scale ++make plastic beads directly +Emulsion polymerization ++micron length scale ++Surfactant stabilized, surace active agent, latex or latices
Alternating Copolymers
Polymerization of A and B monomers where A and B are alternated r=0
Statistical(random) Copolymers
Polymerization of A and B monomers where A or B have an equal chance of being the next mer. r=1
Molecular Masses
Polymers have a range of molecular masses, a distribution. A mass spec shows a bell curve as the distribution for step growth
Polyolefins
Polymers whose mers belong to the category of alkenes. These include polyethylene and polypropylene.
Px
Px=(1-p)*P^(x-1) Based on limiting reactant
alcohol
R-OH
Termination Mechanism for Radical Polyerization
Recombination- this favors bond formation that termination myst be kept low; Xn=2v_bar Disproportiation-proton transfer; still have two chains; Xn=v_bar
For PET Ester Interchange
Removing MeOH and adding Ethylene glycol helps to increase chaing length and the formation of polymers P=1 bc no more carboxylic acid
Laquers
Shellac is another example of hydroxy aliphatic resin that is bio-based from the lac bug, but bad wear resistance. Novalac was synthesized to replace these materials
How do chains grow in a step growth system?
Small dimers and trimers dominate the reaction in the early reaction times Soon all the monomers are essentially tied up in dimers and trimers; at this point, the rate of reaction stuff starts to build
How do we determine how many monomers are left at a given point?
Step Growth X=1 Nx=No*(1-p)^2*p^(x-1) Nx=No*(1-p)^2 ^2 bc our mer is composed of two monomers
Step Growth vs. Chain Growth
Step Growth is dynamic, equiibrium determined configuration Living Chain growth is static, kinetically determined configuration
What difference does trans or cis make?
Tglass for cis and trans polyisoprene is 200K
What are we looking to predict in a copolymer?
The amount of each monomer incorporated into the polymer chains. This is F1 and F2. We cannot tune the reactivity ratios, but we can tune the feeds, F1&F2 =>Azeotropic copolymerization has a constant F1 given f1
Pi Stacking
The attractive, noncovalent interactions between aromatic rings; important in base stacking in nucleic acids.
For Chain Growth Systems
The monomer must be activated by destabilizing the Pi bond So we use an activated initiator The chain then grows until it runs out of monomer or terminates
Mw
The weignt average molecular mass is taken over a wight basis
For Block Copolymers what if A and B are different
Then the copolymer will form a microphase segregation and form a micelle
Polyurethanes
These are very relavant industrial polymers and appear in many forms like foams, glues, paints, coatings and are usually heavily cross linked Hard segments are formed by the typical linking group Soft segments are like the poly ethylene glycol
Vulcanization
Uses Sulfer to cross-link polyisoprene by using the double bond in polyisoprene. This makes it almost impossible to melt it
Kinetic chain Length
V_bar=([Mo]-[M])/[*] V_bar vs Xn V_bar is still growing
Xn equation when ratio is not equal to 1
Xn=(1+r)/(1+r-2rp)
Carothers Equation
Xn=No/N No is the initial number of molecules N is the number of molecules Xn=1/(1-p)
Concentration of M for chain polymers
[M]=[Mo]*e^-t/Tau
Free radicals
are electrostatically neutral and polymerization by free radicals is a default option. Free radicals are stable and cheap, but their reactions are horribly complex
Kevlar and Nomex
are elementally indistingishable from nylon, but are far more superior thermal properties Spider silk is the holy grail of polymer materials. They key issue is not composition (configuration), the conformation is the stumbling block -Conformation is secondary structure protein folding. -Not knowing how to fold it is the issue
Structure and Properties
are intimately related
aromatic
aromaticity is a property of cyclic (ring-shaped), planar (flat) structures with a ring of resonance bonds that gives increased stability compared to other geometric or connective arrangements with the same set of atoms
xn
average chain length
Bioderived polymers
cellulose and proteins
Rubbery materials are
entropic springs & exhibit this behavior only above Tglass. A Tglass the key to a good rubber
fave
fave=#functional groups/#ofmolecules If fave=2, then P->1, Xn->inf or loops If fave>2, then we get a gel through crosslinking
Kevlar is spun
in fuming sulfuric acid because that is the only system that will break up hydrogen bonding
Chain Growth is driven by
initiators which are the only place polymerication will occur, which is completely unlike step growth
monomer
is one molecule building block before it is incorporated into a chain
x
is the chain length
Living anionic polymerization
is the simplest and most difficult polymerization we will discuss Butyl Lithium is a standard initiator LAP has no formal termination mechanism, under ideal conditions, the chains will propagate immediately However, high steric hinderance from large monomers may inhibit the reaction from continuing Monomers need extreme purity Number of initiators equals the number of chains Only have "one" reaction which is polymerization/monomer addition @kp = 1/Tau
Polyethylene
is the simplist polyolefin ethylene => polyethylene Fully saturated C-C backbone with tetrahedral angles Polyethylene will crystalize in a zig-zag fashion -high density polyethylene is 80% crystalline -This is why you can't see through milk jugs -Cystals scatter light -Low density Polyethylne is transparent because crystals are lower concnetration -Unit cell has nothing to do with molecular weight of the polymer
Mo
mass repeated unit (mass of mer)
Step Growth reactions
most synthetic stepgrowth polymer are modeled by their reactive groups Stoichiometry is important for full chains
Mn
number average molecular mass
N
number of all chains N=sumation(Nx)
First sysnthetic polymers included
nylon which replaced silk Bakelite and phenol-formaldehyde resins were used as binders for wood dust composites
stoichiometric ratio
r=NoA/NoB`
Reactive Ratio
r=kself/kother
Kinetics of Ester intercahnge
ra=-k[COOH][OH] Cokt=1/(1-P)-1=Xn-1 where Xn is proportional to t
NoA and NoB
reactive groups present at t=0
Mer
repeating unit as found in the polymer or oligomer
Homogeneous chain growth systems
single phase, catalytic, one initiator for many monomers
Electron Withdrawing groups
strongly electronegative and pull electron density away from rest of the molecule, and stabilize negative charge. favor anionic polymerzation because a carboanion will be more stable with less electron density Ex is Acrylonitrile->polyacrylonitile
glass transition temperature
temperature where material goes from rubbery to solid
Hydrogen Bonding
the intermolecular force in which a hydrogen atom that is bonded to a highly electronegative atom is attracted to an unshared pair of electrons of an electronegative atom in a nearby molecule
Chain growth polymerization
these are systems with unsaturated monomers and destabilizing the double bonds creates the chains. Fluctation in electron density for the pi bond indicates its behavior Radicals would rather form a bond or double bond than be alive Carbocation and carboanions are not happy either
diol
two hydroxyl groups
diisocyanate
two isocyanates on a molecule