Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Melt conditions glass transition crystallisation TgTg TmTm POLYMER T g ( o C) Polydimethylsiloxane -123 Poly(vinyl acetate) 28 Polystyrene 100 Poly(methyl.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Melt conditions glass transition crystallisation TgTg TmTm POLYMER T g ( o C) Polydimethylsiloxane -123 Poly(vinyl acetate) 28 Polystyrene 100 Poly(methyl."— Presentation transcript:

1 melt conditions glass transition crystallisation TgTg TmTm POLYMER T g ( o C) Polydimethylsiloxane -123 Poly(vinyl acetate) 28 Polystyrene 100 Poly(methyl methacrylate) 105 Polycarbonate 150 Polysulfone 190 Poly(2,6-dimethyl-1,4-phenylene oxide) 220 Polymers with more flexible backbones, and smaller substituent side groups have lower glass transition temperatures

2 melt conditions glass transition crystallisation TgTg TmTm For semi-crystalline polymers T g T m ( o C) Polyethylene (high density)-120135 Polycaprolactone-6061 Poly(vinylidene fluoride)-45172 Polyoxymethylene-85195 Poly(vinyl alcohol) 85258 Nylon-6,6 49265 Poly(ethylene terephthalate) 69265 Both T g and T m increase with decreasing chain flexibility

3 From Fried, Joel R., “Polymer Science and Technology”, Prentice Hall PTR, Englewood Cliffs, NJ (1995 )

4

5

6 Polymer solutions “dilute”, semi-dilute, through to concentrated Rheology: a study of the flow of polymer melts and solutions (shear-thinning, die swell, energy requirements for mold filling, design of mixers, extruders

7 Block copolymer solutions and melts: making patterned surfaces and ordered melt morphologies

8 Scientists, academics < 1930s Industrialists 1830 Charles Goodyear,: vulcanised rubber Hevea brasiliensis +  + S elastomeric material 1847 Christian Schonbern Cellulose + nitric acid cellulose nitrate 1860 Leo Baekeland (Bakelite) phenol-formaldehyde resin 1930s DuPont (USA) nylon, teflon 1938Dow (USA) polystyrene 1939 ICI (UK) LDPE WWII: shortage of natural rubber! “A damned gooey mess” Another failed synthesis

9 Scientists begin to look at complex systems.... 1920’s Hermann Staudinger, German Physical Chemist “long-chained molecules or macromolecules” interacting, separate very long, alkane-like intermediate speciesbut misunderstood. e.g., T m, flow behaviour flexibility

10 Synthesis of polymers biosynthesis step-growth polymerisation All monomer/oligomers/polymers are equally reactive with one another so that there is a distribution of chain sizes chain-growth polymerisation Monomers joined successively to a growing chain A few long chains in a sea of monomers

11 Step-growth polymerisation A n + A m -> A n+m + by-product polydispersity

12 Chain-growth polymerisation A n + A -> A n+1 Monodisperse, high-MW of chains Initiation of the active monomer Propagation of growth of the active (free radical ) chain by sequential addition of monomer Termination of the active chain to give final product

13

14 Q8: Contrast step-growth and chain-growth mechanisms in the synthesis of linear polymers and include statements comparing the final products of these two classes of synthetic mechanisms.


Download ppt "Melt conditions glass transition crystallisation TgTg TmTm POLYMER T g ( o C) Polydimethylsiloxane -123 Poly(vinyl acetate) 28 Polystyrene 100 Poly(methyl."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google