Polymerization
Polymerization
Polymerization
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An example of alkene
polymerization, in which each styrene monomer's double bond reforms as a single
bond plus a bond to another styrene monomer. The product is polystyrene.
In polymer chemistry, polymerization (American English), or polymerisation (British
English), is a process of reacting monomer molecules together in a chemical reaction to
form polymer chains or three-dimensional networks.[1][2][3] There are many forms of
polymerization and different systems exist to categorize them.
Other monomer units, such as formaldehyde hydrates or simple aldehydes, are able to
polymerize themselves at quite low
temperatures (ca. −80 °C) to Homopolymers
form trimers;[3] molecules consisting
of 3 monomer units, which
can cyclize to form ring cyclic
structures, or undergo further Copolymers
reactions to form tetramers,[3] or 4
monomer-unit compounds. Such small polymers are referred to as oligomers.
[3]
Generally, because formaldehyde is an exceptionally reactive electrophile it
allows nucleophilic addition of hemiacetal intermediates, which are in general short-lived
and relatively unstable "mid-stage" compounds that react with other non-polar
molecules present to form more stable polymeric compounds.
Polymerization that is not sufficiently moderated and proceeds at a fast rate can be very
hazardous. This phenomenon is known as autoacceleration, and can cause fires and
explosions.
Step-growth[edit]
Main article: Step-growth polymerization
In step-growth (or step) polymerization, pairs of reactants, of any lengths, combine at
each step to form a longer polymer molecule. The average molar mass increases
slowly. Long chains form only late in the reaction.[6][7]
Chain-growth[edit]
Main article: Chain-growth polymerization
In chain-growth (or chain) polymerization, the only chain-extension reaction step is the
addition of a monomer to a growing chain with an active center such as a free
radical, cation, or anion. Once the growth of a chain is initiated by formation of an active
center, chain propagation is usually rapid by addition of a sequence of monomers. Long
chains are formed from the beginning of the reaction.[6][7]
Polymerization of ethylene
Diverse methods are employed to manipulate the initiation, propagation, and
termination rates during chain polymerization. A related issue is temperature control,
also called heat management, during these reactions, which are often highly
exothermic. For example, for the polymerization of ethylene, 93.6 kJ of energy are
released per mole of monomer.[8]
Photopolymerization[edit]
Main article: Photopolymer
Most photopolymerization reactions are chain-growth polymerizations which are
initiated by the absorption of visible[9] or ultraviolet light. The light may be absorbed
either directly by the reactant monomer (direct photopolymerization), or else by
a photosensitizer which absorbs the light and then transfers energy to the monomer. In
general, only the initiation step differs from that of the ordinary thermal polymerization of
the same monomer; subsequent propagation, termination, and chain-transfer steps are
unchanged.[6] In step-growth photopolymerization, absorption of light triggers an addition
(or condensation) reaction between two comonomers that do not react without light. A
propagation cycle is not initiated because each growth step requires the assistance of
light.[10]
Multiphoton polymerization using single pulses have also been demonstrated for
fabrication of complex structures using a digital micromirror device.[12]
See also