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Polymers History of Polymers

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Polymers History of Polymers A plastic material is one that is easily shaped and takes on a permanent set. The term polymer refers to a material which has been made ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Polymers History of Polymers


1
PolymersHistory of Polymers
  • A plastic material is one that is easily shaped
    and takes on a permanent set.
  • The term polymer refers to a material which has
    been made by some polymerisation process.
  • Additives and polymers combined yield plastics.
  • The history of plastics is difficult to pin down.
    Man has been using polymers such as shellac,
    horn, gutta, percha, bitumen, lacquer and amber
    for centuries.

2
PloymersHistory of polymers
  • It is not surprising that research was undertaken
    to develop and improve on nature, thus synthetic
    polymers were developed.
  • With an increase in understanding in the
    structure of these materials there was rapid
    development in the technology of polymers. Their
    historical development generally follows five
    stages

3
PolymersHistory of Polymers
  • 1- from earliest time to 1900 the realisation of
    a new material group,
  • 2- 1900 -1930 The birth of a plastic technology,
  • 3 - 1930 -1950 Plastics as substitute materials
  • 4 - 1950 1970 The Plastics age
  • 5 - 1970 - now Engineering Plastics.

4
PolymersStructure of polymers
  • New polymers are being discovered and developed
    all the time. Many are developed for particular
    property combinations which are required for
    specific tasks.
  • Until 1920 people thought polymers were just
    thick jellies or liquids like bitumen. Nobody
    really understood them fully. In 1920 Staudinger
    showed that polymers were composed of very large
    molecules,- thus the term polymer was developed.

5
Polymersstructures
  • Polymers consist of long chains, which are
    composed of simple structural units (mers) strung
    together.

poly many
mer
mer
mer
mer
mer
mer
mer
mer
mer
Mers strung together to form polymers
6
Polymersstructures
  • There are lots of different types of mers that
    can join together to form polymers. Mers are
    simple organic molecules. These are special
    molecules that will link together such as double
    link molecules. These are like linking arms
    together to form a human chain. However, if two
    people link together with one hand each and dont
    use the other hand they can only form pairs, such
    molecules cant form mers.

7
Polymersstructures
Closed molecule
One-handed
  • 1

Two-handed
Linear molecule
Three or more handles
Cross-linked polymers
8
Polymersstructures Types of chains
  • 1-Linear chains
  • Thesse are formed when chains are built up
    without any deviation. They are generally formed
    when the mers used have only two reactive sites.
  • 2-Branched chains
  • Deviation can occur when the chain is being
    formed and chain branching can result.
  • 3- Cross-linking
  • The branches can join up to give cross-links
    between adjacent chains.

9
Polymersstructures
  • Level 1 The types of mers
  • Level 2 Combining mers together
  • Level 3 The way mers are joined together
  • Level 4 The degree of order in polymers
  • Level 5 Polymer mixtures

10
Polymersstructures Thermoset and Thermplastics
  • The basic structure of polymers is that the mers
    are strung together in chains. Analogies like
    paper clip chains and spaghetti are very useful.
  • There is a strong covalent bond along the length
    of the chain. The way the chains relate to each
    other determines the type of structure and, hence
    properties. If the bonds between the chains are
    primary then a rigid 3D network is constructed
    and a Thermoplastic polymer will result.

11
Polymersstructures Thernmoset and Thermplastics
  • If the bonds between the chains are weak
    secondary bonds, then these will easily be
    disrupted by heat. Such polymers are termed
    Thermoplastics.
  • The difference is explained by describing how
    butter can be melted in a frying pan and when
    allowed to cool, will harden again. Whereas if an
    egg is broken and fried in the pan until hard, it
    cannot be resoftened.

12
Polymers Polymerisation Methods of sticking
Mers together
  • The process of sticking mers together is called
    polymerisation. The two ways of doing this are
  • 1- Additional polymerisation, this is the most
    important of the two because most important
    polymers are made this way and,
  • 2- Condensation polymerisation. This method tends
    to yield rigid plastics.

13
Polymers Addition Polymerisation
  • The basic idea of sticking mers together like
    this is similar to a zip. The mers are added onto
    the end of a growing chain. There are three basic
    parts to the process
  • Initiation - Polyethylene C2H4, has a double bond
    between the carbon atoms. One of these bonds is
    stronger, while the other is weak. Each bond
    contains two electrons. The weak bond is attacked
    by a radical.

14
Polymers Addition Polymerisation
  • This radical grabs an electron and leaves one
    electron behind.
  • Propagation -When other ethylene molecules come
    near the ethylene radical they too are attacked
    and a mer is attached. The combined molecule is a
    growing chain radical. The process continues by
    adding other ethylene molecules in a similar
    fashion.

15
Polymers Addition Polymerisation
  • Termination - Possible stops to the growing
    chains could simply be running out of mers or
    radicals.
  • R-C-C -C-C R-C-C-C-C-

Radical
H H
H H H H
H H
H H
H H
H H H H
polyethylene
Ethylene
Addition Polymerisation
16
Polymers Condensation Polymerisation
  • This process depends on splicing rather than
    zipping. The starting molecules are spliced or
    joined together with small molecules, like water,
    being condensed out of the reaction at the end of
    polymerisation. The remaining structure is a
    comples 3D structure which is rigid and has a
    significant cross-linking feature.

17
Polymers Condensation Polymerisation
H C O H
Formaldehyde
  • .

OH
Phenol
OH
OH
H C H
H2O
18
Polymers Types of Polymers
  • Thermoplastics
  • These are thermosoftening polymers and make up
    about 85 - 90 of the bulk of polymers. They
    include
  • High Density Polyethylene --HDPE
  • Low Density Polyethylene --LDPE
  • Poly Vinyl Chloride --PVC
  • Polystyrene -- PS
  • Polypropylene -- PP

19
Polymers Types of Polymers
  • Thermosetting
  • The important ones in this group include
  • Phenolics - This is a group of polymers based on
    phenol formaldehyde (PF) the original developed
    by bakeland. It is a cheap, brittle, muddy-brown
    (0r black or blue) polymer.
  • Urea-formaldehyde - A white polymer that can be
    easily coloured. Uses include electric plugs,
    sockets, and other fittings.

20
Polymers Types of Polymers
  • Melamine-formaldehyde. This is harder, more
    scratch resistant and clearer. It can be found in
    melaware and formica table tops
  • Polyesters - This is the resin used in fibreglass
    production.
  • Epoxies - Tis polymer is used in adhesives.
  • Polyurethanes - Are hard to classify as they can
    exist as hard glassy polymer or as a soft
    flexible sponge.

21
Polymers Additives for Polymers
  • Just as metals are alloyed to improve their
    properties, substances are added to polymers to
    improve theirs. A typical example
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