
These linear
polymers are well packed and have high magnitude of intermolecular forces of
attraction and therefore have high densities, high tensil (pulling) strength
and high melting points. Some common example of linear polymers are high
density polyethylene nylon, polyester, PVC, PAN etc.
Linear, Branched, and Cross-linked Polymers:
Polyethylene
is called a linear or straight-chain polymer because it consists
of a long string of carbon-carbon bonds. These terms are misleading because the
geometry around each carbon atom is tetrahedral and the chain is neither linear
nor straight, as shown in the figure
As the
polymer chain grows, it folds back on itself in a random fashion to form
structures such as the one shown in the figure below on the left. Straight chains can sometimes fold tightly
enough to make crystal structures (on the right below) even though the
molecules are very long!
Neatly packed straight chains can make crystals! |
Randomly oriented straight chains can
be pretty messy
|
|
Cross-linked
polymers contain short side chains (cross links) that connect different
polymer chains into a “network” as shown in the figure to the
right. At first, adding
cross-links between polymer chains makes the polymer more elastic (they can stretch and return to their original form.) The links can “pull” the chains back
together when they are stretched! The
vulcanization of rubber, for example, results from the introduction of short
chains of sulfur atoms that link the polymer chains in natural rubber. Cross-linking also decreases the viscosity (the resistance to flow) of
polymers. In order for polymers to flow,
the chains must move past each other and cross-linking prevents this. Elastomers
are elastic polymers created by limited cross-linking. As the number of cross-links increases,
however, the polymer becomes more rigid and cannot stretch as much; the polymer
will become less viscous and less
elastic and might even become brittle. e.g., Bakelite, malamine formaldehyde resin etc.
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