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TERM PAPER ON
INORGANIC
POLYMERS
SECTION: G5003
First and foremost I thank my teachers who have assigned me this term paper to bring out my creative
capabilities.
I express my gratitude to my parents for being a continuous source of encouragement and for their all
financial aid given to me.
I have like to acknowledge the assignment provided to me by the library staff of LOVELY
PROFESSIONAL UNIVERSITY.
Md.Aqib
CONTENTS
1. What is a polymer ?
2. How polymers are depicted ?
3. Reason for interest in inorganic polymers
6.Refrence
What Is a Polymer?
Polymers are among the most complicated molecules known. They may contain thousands
of atoms in the main chain, plus complex clusters of atoms that form the side groups
attached to the skeletal units. How, then, can we depict such molecules in a manner that
is easy to comprehend? First, an enormous simplification can be achieved if we remember
that most synthetic polymers contain a fairly simple structure that repeats over and over down
the chain. This simplest repetitive structure is known as the repeating unit, and it provides the
basis for an uncomplicated representation of the structure of the whole polymer.
The second set of reasons for the burgeoning interest in inorganic-based macromolecules
is connected with their known or anticipated differences from their totally organic
counterparts. Inorganic elements generate different combinations of properties in polymer
than do carbon atoms. For one thing, the bonds formed between inorganic elements are
often longer, stronger, and more resistant to free radical cleavage reactions than are
bonds formed by carbon. Thus, the incorporation of inorganic elements into the backbone
of a polymer can change the bond angles and bond torsional mobility, and this in
turn can change the materials properties to a remarkable degree. Inorganic elements can
have different valencies than carbon, and this means that the number of side groups
attached to a skeletal atom may be different from the situation in an organic polymer.
This will affect the flexibility of the macromolecule, its ability to react with chemical
reagents, its stability at high temperatures, and its interactions with solvents and with
other polymer molecules. Moreover, the use of non-carbon elements in the backbone
provides opportunities for tailoring the chemistry in ways that are not possible in totally
organic macromolecules. Many examples of this feature are given in the later chapters
of this book. Thus, the future development of polymer chemistry and polymer engineering
may well depend on the inorganic aspects of the field for the introduction of new
molecular structures, new combinations of properties, and new insights into the behavior
of macromolecules in solution and in the solid state.
Thus, inorganic polymers provide an opportunity for an expansion of fundamental
knowledge and, at the same time, for the development of new materials that will assist
in the advancement of technology. Throughout this book an attempt has been made to
connect these two aspects in a way that will provide a perspective of this field.
For example, the superb thermal stability of several poly(organosiloxanes) can be understood
in terms of their fundamental chemistry.
A glance at the Periodic Table or at an inorganic chemistry textbook will convince the
reader that, of the 100 or so stable elements in the table, at least half have a chemistry
that could allow their incorporation into macromolecular structures. This will undoubtedly
come to pass in the years ahead. However, at the present time, most of the known
inorganic polymer systems are based on relatively few elements that fall within the
region of the Periodic Table known as the “Main Group” series. These elements occupy
groups III (13 in the IUPAC nomenclature), IV (14), V (15), and VI (16) and include
elements such as silicon, germanium, tin, phosphorus, and sulfur. Of these, polymers
based on the elements silicon and phosphorus have received by far the most attention.
This is the reason why silicon- and phosphorus-containing polymers are considered in
the greatest details.
1. Molecular Weights
Introduction
This is the characteristic that underlies all the properties that distinguish a polymer from its low-
molecular-weight analogues. Thus, one of the most important goals in the preparation of a polymer is
to control its molecular weight by a suitable choice of polymerization conditions.
Many properties of a polymeric material are improved when the polymer chains are sufficiently long.
For example, properties such as the tensile strength of a fiber, the tear strength of a film, or the
hardness of a molded object may increase asymptotically with increases in molecular weight. If the
molecular weight is too low, say below a lower limit Ml, then the physical property could be
unacceptably low. It might also be unacceptable to let the molecular weight become too high. Above
an upper limit Mu, the viscosity of the bulk (undiluted) polymer might be too high for it to be
processed easily. Thus, a goal in polymer synthetics is to prepare a polymer so that its molecular
weight falls within the “window” demarcated by Ml and Mu. This is frequently accomplished by a
choice of reaction time, temperature, nature and amount of catalyst, the nature and amount of solvent,
the addition of reactants can terminate the growth of the polymer chains sooner than would otherwise
be the case, addition of complexing agents such as crown ethers, or by the presence of an external
physical field, such as ultrasound.
There are several important reasons for wanting to know molecular weights in polymer
science. From the viewpoint of inorganic polymers, the main uses are for the interpretation
of molecular-weight dependent properties, and for the elucidation of polymerization
mechanisms.
Viscometry
This technique is by far the easiest for the characterization of polymers in solution. This
can be seen from the simplicity of the typical (glass) viscometer shown in Figure 2.7.
It is used to obtain the viscosity of a liquid by the use of Poiseuille’s equation, which is
η = πpr4t /8LV
The experiment involves a measurement of the amount of time t required for a volume
V of liquid to flow through a capillary of radius r and length L when the pressure
difference is p. The viscosity η may then simply be calculated from this equation, in
which the π is the numerical constant.
In polymer solution viscometry, it is not necessary to determine absolute values of
the viscosity; relative values are sufficient. These quantities are called “viscosities,” but
the terms are misnomers because they are generally unitless ratios and therefore do not
have the units of viscosity. In any case, the relative viscosity is simply the ratio of the
viscosity of the polymer solution to the viscosity of the pure solvent at the same temperature.
Backbone Bonding
A knowledge of the molecular weight of a polymer provides information about the
number of backbone or skeletal bonds per molecule.37,38 But the skeletal bonds require
additional characterization. The most important item of information that needs to be
determined is the length of each bond. In this regard inorganic polymers are quite different
from their organic counterparts. Specifically, virtually all covalent bonds between pairs of
atoms in inorganic polymers (Si, P, N, etc.) are longer than the C-C bond found in organic
polymers. Thus, inorganic polymers are much less “congested” and, as a consequence,
much more flexible.39–42 They are more flexible both in the equilibrium sense, which
means that they can form more compact random coils, and in the dynamic sense, which
means they can readily switch between different spatial arrangements. The first of these
factors has a powerful influence on the melting point of a polymer. The second influences
the temperature below which the polymer becomes a glass.43
The melting point of any crystalline material is given by
Tm=ΔHm/ΔSm
where ΔHm is the heat of fusion and ΔSm is the entropy of fusion. Since inorganic polymers
can adopt very compact random-coil arrangements of high entropy, their entropies
of fusion are frequently very high, and their melting points relatively low. Of course
exceptions can occur, particularly when unusually strong intermolecular attractions
give an atypically large heat of fusion.
The glass-transition temperature Tg is the temperature below which the polymer is
glass-like because long-range motions of the polymer chains are no longer possible.
The more flexible the polymer, in the dynamic sense, the lower is the temperature to
which it can be cooled before this flexibility is “frozen out.” Thus, the high dynamic
flexibility generally enjoyed by inorganic chains frequently generates relatively low
glass transition temperatures as well. The glass-transition temperature is of considerable
practical, as well as fundamental importance. For molded objects, it closely
approximates the empirically defined “brittle point” of a polymer. This has little influence on the
properties of films and fibers, however. After all, glass wool is far
below its glass-transition temperature at room temperature, yet it is clearly not brittle.
The same is true for polystyrene film, which is used extensively as a packaging
material.
Under some conditions, branches can grow from the chain backbone, This could occur, for
example, during a polymerization process, as in thecase of the formation of some
phosphazene polymers. It could also occur subsequently,
through processes such as high-energy irradiations, and the generation of free radicals.
Because branch points represent irregularities in the chain structure, they can greatly
suppress the tendency of a polymer to crystallize. Branching can occur to the extent that
a network is formed, as in the preparation of thermosetting epoxy resins, or in the curing
of elastomers.
3.Solubility Parameters
This observation is, in fact, the basis for the rule of thumb that “like dissolves like.” This
rule is obviously very qualitative, but it has now been sucessfully extended to provide
a quantitative basis for finding potential solvents for a polymer. In the theory of
Hildebrand, it is acknowledged that ΔHdis is almost certainly going to be positive. The
goal is then to find a means to make ΔHdis as small as possible. Specifically, it is given
by the equation
ΔHdis=v1 v2(δ1- 2δ)2
where it is written as the product of the volume fraction of solvent, the volume fraction
of polymer, and the square of the difference between the values of a molecular characteristic
called the “solubility parameter,”55 δ for the solvent and polymer, respectively.
The quantity δ is defined by
Δ=(ΔE/V)1/2
that is, as the square root of the cohesive energy density, which is the ratio of the molar
energy of vaporization to the molar volume of the liquid. Thus, the quantity δ is a measure
of the strength of the interactions between the molecules of a substance, since
vaporization involves greatly increasing the average distance of separation between
them. Two molecules are “like” one another if the strengths of their interactions are
similar. The two values of the solubility parameter will then be similar, and this will
minimize the positive value of ΔHdis, as shown in equation (24). The utility of the
approach is based on the fact that values of δ have been determined for many solvents
and polymers by both experiment and approximate calculations. Solubility is likely to
occur when a polymer and solvent have solubility parameters within one and a half
units of each other, when the units are in calories and cm3.
Trends
Actual values of solubility parameters show the same trends for both solvents and polymers.
Non-polar molecules and repeat units have weak intermolecular forces, small
energies of vaporization, and therefore small solubility parameters. As might be
expected, increased polarity increases the solubility parameter, and hydrogen bonding
gives the largest values of all
Applications
The fundamental idea is to determine the solubility parameter of the polymer, and then
to use tabulated results to identify a number of solvents that have solubility parameters
close to this value. The list of potential solvents is then narrowed to two or three
candidates. Solvents that are too volatile, too toxic, too flammable, too expensive, and
so on can be removed from the list. Other criteria would depend on the nature of the
studies to be pursued. If the objective is to carry out light-scattering measurements,
the need for maximizing the contrast factor would make the index of refraction of the
solvent an additional important consideration.
Another application would be to minimize the swelling of a cross-linked elastomer
in contact with a solvent. In this case, of course, one would be looking for a polymer
giving the largest mismatch with the solubility parameters of the solvent to which the
elastomer was to be exposed.
It is important to note that these predictions are for the possible miscibility or
immiscibility of two amorphous materials. They do not apply to crystalline polymers
because of the neglect of the already-mentioned positive heat of fusion. Extrapolating
solubility parameters for oligomers to obtain polymer solubility parameters
predictions would be useful, for temperatures above which the polymer would no longer be
crystalline. It should also be mentioned that polymer–solvent interactions can be
characterized by the second virial coefficients that appear in equations (8) and (13) and by the
free energy of interaction parameter χ1 that appears in the Flory–Huggins theory of
polymersolution thermodynamics
4. Crystallinity
Requirements
5. REFRENCE CITED
1. www.aiag.org
2. www.Dupont.com
3. www.plastcs-car.com
4. Schmeal & Purcell, New Polymer Technologys, 260 volume 84, 1988,
AICHE, New York, New York, 1988
5. www.tms.org /journals