13.5 Polymerisation In Alkenes Flashcards

1
Q

What are polymers?

A

Extremely large molecules formed from many thousands of repeat units of small molecules (monomers)

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2
Q

What kind of polymerisation do unsaturated ALKENE molecules undergo?

A

Addition polymerisation

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3
Q

What determines the properties of a polymer?

A

The monomers used

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4
Q

What are the conditions for industrial polymerisation?

A

High temperature, high pressure, presence of catalysts

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5
Q

Do addition polymers have high or low molecular masses?

A

High

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6
Q

What are the rules for drawing a repeat unit?

A

-Repeating unit is always written in square brackets
-After the bracket, you place the letter “n”
-Repeat units are only ever a maximum of 2 carbons wide
-If there is another monomer unit, you place the letter “m” behind

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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

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7
Q

What can polychloroethene be prepared to make?

A

Polymers that are either flexible or rigid

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8
Q

What are the environmental concerns surrounding polymers

A

-The lack of reactivity that makes polymers suitable for storing food and chemicals safely is what makes it difficult to dispose of them
-Many alkane-based polymers are non-biodegradable

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9
Q

How are polymers recycled?

A

Polymers are sorted, chopped into flakes, washed, dried, melted, then cut into pellets and used to make new products

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10
Q

Why is recycling PVC dangerous?

A

-Because of the high chlorine content, and the range of additives present in the polymer
-When burnt, PVC releases hydrogen chloride (a corrosive gas), and other toxic pollutants

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11
Q

How do we recycle PVC?

A

Use solvents to grind the polymer, and high-grade PVC is recovered by precipitation from the solvent

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12
Q

Why are some polymers difficult to recycle?

A

Because they have a high stored energy value

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13
Q

What can be done with waste polymers to give them use?

A

Can be incinerated to produce heat, generating steam to drive a turbine producing electricity.

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14
Q

What is feedstock recycling?

A

The chemical and thermal process that can reclaim monomers, gases, or oil from waste polymers

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15
Q

What is a major advantage of feedstock recycling?

A

It can handle unsorted and unwashed polymers

16
Q

What are bioplastics?

A

Plastics produced from biological components, such as plant starch, cellulose, plant oil, protein

17
Q

How are biodegradable polymers degraded?

A

Broken down by organisms into water, carbon dioxide, and biological components

18
Q

What are photo-degradable polymers?

A

Polymers that contain bonds that are weakened by absorbing light, to start the degradation