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Plastics.

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Presentation on theme: "Plastics."— Presentation transcript:

1 Plastics

2 Monomers Basic building block of polymer

3 Polymers Large molecules with repeating monomers
Monomers are joined together Possess different properties than the monomers that make them up Types: Natural Synthetic

4 Polymer Production Addition Polymerization Condensation Polymerization

5 1) Addition Polymerization
Monomers simply added together Polymer has ALL atoms from monomer a) initiation b) propagation c) termination

6 a) Initiation A compound starts the reaction, free radical
Reaction product is free radical Product reacts with another compound and so on

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8 b) Propagation Radical joins a molecule
A bigger radical is formed and reacts with another molecule…….forms bigger radical, etc.

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10 c) Termination Polymerization ends
Molecule is produced that has ALL paired electrons No unpaired electrons are available to react

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12 2) Condensation Polymerization
Small part of monomer is NOT part of the final molecule Monomers have 2 or more functional groups Polymers formed by functional groups linking together Production of commercial polymers

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14 Polymer Properties General term for “plastics”---synthetic polymer
Based on molecular structure 2 types— Thermoplastic polymers True plastic Pressure applied to form shape and heat softens material 2) Thermosetting polymers Permanently hard with high temperatures and pressure Not possible to mold or soften

15 1) Density Dependent on structure High density Low density
Linear molecules with no branching, just chains Easily pack together Strong intermolecular forces Low density Molecules with branched chains, prevents crystal structure Molecules cannot pack together Less intermolecular forces

16 2. Hardness/Rigidity Hard plastic Thermosetting polymer
Ex. Bakelite, steering wheels

17 3) Flexibility/Elasticity
Material’s capability to withstand forces without breaking Amount of cross-linking determines how flexible material is Elasticity— Material’s capability to go back to its original shape after removal of a force Ex. Rubber

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19 Synthetic Polymers Modern manufactured polymers Synthetic rubber
Various types Possible to have “copolymerization” Copolymer formed from 2 types of monomers Fibers/fabrics Fiber—natural/synthetic material in thread structure Fiber quality depends on tensile strength Ex. Cotton, wool, silk

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21 Biomedical Polymers Plastics used in the medical field
Joint replacements Heart valves Artery replacement Wound covers


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