Polymer Refresher – Part 1
A polymer is a very large molecule (macromolecule) composed of many small repeating molecular units (monomer). Polymers are formed from atoms that are capable of multiple covalent bonds. Such as the carbon atoms in ethylene CH2=CH2 molecule. Molecules with this type of bonding are said to be unsaturated. These compounds tend to keep this structure yet will readily react (under heat and pressure) to form more stable single bond structures; they will form a saturated compound. For example, ethylene will react to form polyethylene [-CH2-CH2-’]n . The [n] signifies the number of repeating units in the polymer backbone. This number can be from 1000 to ~300,000 units. The polyethylene material will have different properties based on the number of repeating ethylene monomer units.
From this simple compound, substitutions can be made to provide different properties. When one substitution is made the compound is a vinyl monomer. When two substitutions are made the compound is a vinylidene monomer. As more substitutions are made other compounds are created.
To recap, polymers are formed through chemical reactions under heat and pressure. Additives, ingredients, and conditions are designed to control how the polymer is formed and desired properties. This process is called polymerization. Polymerizing one kind of monomer will create a homopolymer as in polyethylene or polypropylene.
Visit TriStar to learn even more about polymers – or if you have a specific questions, Ask The Experts right away!
Tags: Bonding, chemistry, organic chemistry, plastics, polymer refresher

February 18th, 2010 at 2:55 PM
I have been seeking all around for that material. Thankfully my partner and i discovered this in Google.