Welcome to destall.com on July 10 2009.
This is an internet experiment running to monitor browsing habbits of individuals through wikipedia contents.

Chain growth polymerisation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  (Redirected from Polyaddition)
Jump to: navigation, search
Ring opening polymerisation to polycaprolactone

Chain growth polymerisation is a polymerisation technique where unsaturated monomer molecules add on to a growing polymer chain one at a time [1]. It can be represented with the chemical equation:

 nM (monomer) \rightarrow (-M-)_n (polymer)

where n is the degree of polymerisation.

"Chain growth polymerisation" and addition polymerization (also called polyaddition) are two different concepts (not always identical). In fact polyurethane polymerizes with addition polymerization (because its polymerization don't produce any small molecules, called "condensate"), but its reaction mechanism concern to a step-growth polymerization.

Contents

[edit] Characteristics

The main characteristics are:

  • polymerization process takes place in three distinct steps:
  1. chain initiation, usually by means of an initiator which starts the chemical process. Typical initiators include any organic compound with a labile group: e.g. azo (-N=N-), disulfide (-S-S-), or peroxide (-O-O-). Two examples are benzoyl peroxide and AIBN.
  2. chain propagation
  3. chain termination, which occurs either by combination or disproportionation. Termination, in radical polymerization, is when the free radicals combine and is the end of the polymerization process.
  • some side reactions may occur, such as: chain transfer to monomer, chain transfer to solvent, and chain transfer to polymer.

[edit] Examples

[edit] References

  1. ^ Introduction to Polymers 1987 R.J. Young Chapman & Hall ISBN 0-412-22170-5

[edit] External links

Personal tools
Languages

Visit joltnews for the latest headlines
Visit bloit.com for company information
Geed Media does computer consulting on long island.
This page viewed times. See Logs