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Chapter 2c

Chapter 2c. Bibliography due on Friday 11:59 PM Upload file on D2L. Office hours: Tuesday 1pm Monday & Wednesday 12-1 or e-mail for an appointment Old Chem 309 daloy@mse.arizona.edu. Polymerization Techniques. Bulk-no solvent just monomer + catalysts

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Chapter 2c

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  1. Chapter 2c Bibliography due on Friday 11:59 PM Upload file on D2L. Office hours: Tuesday 1pm Monday & Wednesday 12-1 or e-mail for an appointment Old Chem 309 daloy@mse.arizona.edu

  2. Polymerization Techniques • Bulk-no solvent just monomer + catalysts • Solution Polymerization-in solvent • Suspension-micron-millimeter spheres • Emulsion-ultrasmall spheres

  3. Bulk Polymerizations Rare Overheat & explode with scale up No solvent-just monomer Polymer usually vitrifies before done Broad MW distribution Acrylic sheets by Bulk polymerization of MMA

  4. Storage of vinyl monomers in air = peroxide initiated polymerizations Tankcar of styrene 2005 in Ohio

  5. Solution Polymerization • Better control of reaction temperature • Better control of polymerization • Slower • Not very green-residual solvent

  6. Suspension Polymerization • Oil droplets dispersed in water • Initiator soluble in oil • Greener than solution polymerization Filter off particles of polymer

  7. Emulsion Polymerization Still oil in water (or the reverse) Initiator in water Smaller particles (latex) Excellent control of temp Solution turns white Polystyrene latex

  8. Suspension Emulsion Mini-emulsion Micro-emulsion Monomer in oil Monomer in oil Monomer in oil Monomer in oil Initiator in oil Initiator in water Initiator in water Initiator in water

  9. Less Common Polymerization Techniques • Solid state polymerization • Polymerization of crystalline monomers • Diacetylene crystals • Gas Phase polymerization • Parylene polymerizations • Plasma polymerization • Put anything in a plasma

  10. Solid State Polymerizations Heating Oligomeric Condensation Polymers Tg < X < Tm Tg = 67 °C and Tm = 265 °C Nylons, Polyesters Nylon 66 Tg = 70 °C and Tm = 264 °C

  11. Solid State Polymerizations Topological Polymerizations: Polymerization of crystals Quinodimethane polymerizations Di- and Triacetylene polymerizations In single crystals

  12. Solid State Polymerizations of Fullerenes Topological polymerization in 3-D

  13. Gas Phase Polymerization Light olefins Parylenes

  14. LIGHT OLEFINS Ethylene and propylene • Food Packaging • Hygiene & Medical • Consumer & Ind. Liners • Stretch Films • Agricultural Films • HDSS Film 2004 Global PE Demand: 136 Billion Pounds

  15. Types of Polyethylene LLDPE (0.860-0.926) “Linear Low Density” HDPE (0.940-0.965) “High Density” O O O C-OH O O O O O O O O LDPE (0.915-0.930) “Low Density” High Pressure Copolymers (AA, VA, MA, EA)

  16. Gas Phase Polymerization: Light olefins Oxygen initiator 2-3K atmospheres 250 °C

  17. Gas Phase Polymerization: Light olefins Fluidized bed polymerization MORE FLEXIBLE

  18. Gas Phase Polymerization: Paralene Gas phase Polymerizes on contact Conformal coatings Pinhole free Preserving artifacts (paper) Microelectronics Medical devices

  19. Plasma Polymerization • 500 Å - 1 micron thick films • Continuous coatings • Solvent free • High cohesion to surface • Highly cross-linked • Generally amorphous

  20. Plasma Polymerization Monomers: Hydrocarbons Double or triple bonds nice, not necessary Fluorocarbon Tetraalkoxysilanes (for silica)

  21. Plasma Polymerization Fig 2. Tubular-type reactors Fig1. Bell-jar type reactors P- pumps; PS-power supply; S-substrate M-feed gas inlet; G-vacuum gauge

  22. Plasma Polymerization PET [Poly(Ethylene Terephthalate)] Multi-layer bottles No loss of fizz

  23. Characterization of Polymers • 1H & 13C Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy (NMR) • Infrared spectroscopy (Fourier Transform IR) • Elemental or combustion analyses • Molecular weight

  24. 13C NMR is a very powerful way to determine the microstructure of a polymer. 13C NMR spectrum of CH3 region of atactic polypropylene

  25. Infrared Spectroscopy: Bond vibrations polystyrene C=C-H C=C stretch C-H 2-16 Micron wavelength range

  26. Infrared Spectroscopy: Bond vibrations C-H bend C=O C-O C-H stretch Poly(methyl methacrylate)

  27. Types of Addition Polymerizations

  28. Chemical Modification of Polymers Hydrolysis 2) Oxidation 3) Photochemistry (can be oxidation or not) 4) Chemical crosslinking 5) Chemical modification See next slide

  29. Chemical Modification of Polyvinyl Alcohol to make Polyvinyl butyral for safety glass No PVB With PVB

  30. Bullet Proof Glass

  31. Making bullet proof glass glass, laminates and polycarbonate sheets are interlaid in a clean room to ensure clarity. In our large autoclave, superheated steam seals the layers together.

  32. Polycarbonate is Strong Material Young's modulus (E) 2-2.4 Gpa Tensile strength (σt) 55-75 Mpa

  33. Exploding CD’s Mythbusters:> 23,000 rpm CD will shatter Scratches or defects are the culprit 52X drive -MAX: 27,500 rpm typical: 11,000 rpm 10,000 RPM = 65 m/s = 145 mph 7200 gravities of acceleration And approx. 5 MPa stress Yield Strength 60 MPa

  34. Nalgene

  35. Polycarbonate Properties Density: 1.2 g/cc Young's modulus (E) 2-2.4 Gpa Tensile strength (σt) 55-75 Mpa Elongation (ε) @ break 80-150% Glass transition (Tg) 150 °C Melting (Tm) 267 °C Upper working temperature 115-130 °C $7.3-11/kg

  36. Bisphenol and Endocrine System 100-250 g bisphenol per Liter water in water bottles 20 g/Liter per day can disrupt mouse development vom Saal, F.S., Richter, C.A., Ruhlen, R.R. Nagel, S.C. and Welshons, W.V. Disruption of laboratory experiments due to leaching of bisphenol a from polycarbonate cages and bottles and uncontrolled variability in components of animal feed. Proceedings from the International Workshop on Development of Science-Based Guidelines for Laboratory Animal Care, National Academies Press, Washington DC, 65-69, 2004. Immune system Antioxidant enzymes Decreases plasma testosterone Learning disabilities vom Saal, F.S., Nagel, S.C., Timms, B.G. and Welshons, W.V. Implications for human health of the extensive bisphenol A literature showing adverse effects at low doses: A response to attempts to mislead the public. Toxicology, 212:244-252, 2005.

  37. Nalgene Substitutes-food and water • Glass (blender, pitchers, glasses) • Metal (water bottles) • Polyethylene (water bottles) • Polyamide or Nylon (baby bottles)

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