13.5 Polymerisation in alkenes Flashcards

1
Q

Who is believed to have been among the first to find an application for polymers

A

The Mayan civilisation in Central America
16th century
Playing ball games using rubber collected from local trees

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2
Q

What are polymers

A

Extremely large molecules formed from many thousands of repeat units of smaller molecules known as monomers

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3
Q

What type of polymerisation do unsaturated alkene molecules undergo

A

Addition polymerisation

Produce long saturated chains containing no double bonds

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4
Q

Roughly what conditions are used for industrial polymerisation

A

High temperature and pressure using catalysts

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5
Q

Addition polymers have high ______ masses. Synthetic polymers are usually named after the ______ that reacts to form their giant molecules, prefixed by ‘_____’.

A

Molecular
Monomer
Poly

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6
Q

What is a repeat unit

A

The specific arrangement of atoms in the polymer molecule that repeats over and over again
Always written in square brackets
After bracket, place letter n to show there is a large number of repeats

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7
Q

What are addition polymers usually made from

A

One type of monomer unit

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8
Q

How was poly(ethene) made

A

By accident
Carrying out high pressure experiments with ethene, test vessel leaked allowing trace of oxygen to contaminate fresh sample
Next day, white waxy residue had been produced

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9
Q

What properties does a polymer with linear chains have

A

HIGH DENSITY POLYETHENE

Some strength making it ideal for toys, detergent bottles and water pipes

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10
Q

What properties does a polymer with branched chains have

A

LOW DENSITY POLYETHENE

Little strength but is flexible making it ideal for plastic films and bags

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11
Q

What is PVC short for

A

Poly(chloroethene)

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12
Q

Common uses for PVC

A
Pipes
Films and sheeting
Ducts and profiles
Insulation and cable sheathing
Bottles
Flooring
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13
Q

Economically - Polymers are:

A

Readily available
Cheap to purchase
More convenient for out throwaway society than alternatives (eg. paper bags and glass bottles)

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14
Q

Why are polymers suitable for storing food and chemicals safely

A

Their lack of reactivity

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15
Q

What are the negative effects of using polymers

A

Many alkene-based polymers are non-biodegradable

Killing marine life

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16
Q

Recycling polymers:

A

Reduces environmental impact, conserving finite fossil fuels
Decreases amt. of waste to landfill
Polymers must be sorted by type
Chopped into flakes, washed, dried, melted

17
Q

PVC recycling:

A

Disposal and recycling of PVC is hazardous, high chlorine content and additives
Not sustainable in landfill
Solvents used to dissolve
High grade PVC recovered by precipitation from solvent

18
Q

Using waste polymers as fuel:

A

Some difficult to recycle
From petroleum or natural gas, high stored energy value
Can be incinerated to produce heat, generating steam to drive turbine producing electricity

19
Q

Feedstock recycling:

A

Chemical and thermal processes that can reclaim monomers, gases or oil from waste polymers
Materials produced can be used as raw materials for new polymers

20
Q

What is a major advantage of feedstock recycling

A

It is able to handle unsorted and unwashed polymers

21
Q

What are bioplastics produced from

A

Plant starch, cellulose, plant oils and proteins

22
Q

Why is the use of bioplastics good

A

Protects the environment

Conserves valuable oil reserves

23
Q

Biodegradable polymers:

A

Broken down by microorganisms into water, CO2 and biological compounds
Usually made from starch or cellulose or contain additives that alter the structure of traditional polymers so can be broken down
Compostable - degrade and leave no visible or toxic residues

24
Q

Photodegradable polymers

A

Oil based

Bonds that are weakened by absorbing light to start the degradation