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  2. Polymerization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/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.

  3. Branching (polymer chemistry) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Branching_(polymer_chemistry)

    In polymer chemistry, branching is the regular or irregular attachment of side chains to a polymer's backbone chain. It occurs by the replacement of a substituent (e.g. a hydrogen atom) on a monomer subunit by another covalently-bonded chain of that polymer; or, in the case of a graft copolymer, by a chain of another type.

  4. Polymer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polymer

    Step-growth polymerization can be divided into polycondensation, in which low-molar-mass by-product is formed in every reaction step, and polyaddition. Example of chain polymerization: Radical polymerization of styrene, R. is initiating radical, P. is another polymer chain radical terminating the formed chain by radical recombination.

  5. Polymer architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polymer_architecture

    Long chain branches may increase polymer strength, toughness, and the glass transition temperature (T g) due to an increase in the number of entanglements per chain. A random and short chain length between branches, on the other hand, may reduce polymer strength due to disruption of the chains' ability to interact with each other or crystallize.

  6. Polystyrene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polystyrene

    In chemical terms, polystyrene is a long chain hydrocarbon wherein alternating carbon centers are attached to phenyl groups (a derivative of benzene). Polystyrene's chemical formula is (C 8 H 8) n; it contains the chemical elements carbon and hydrogen. [citation needed]

  7. Radical polymerization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radical_polymerization

    When a monomer adds to a radical chain end, there are two factors to consider regarding its stereochemistry: 1) the interaction between the terminal chain carbon and the approaching monomer molecule and 2) the configuration of the penultimate repeating unit in the polymer chain. [4] The terminal carbon atom has sp 2 hybridization and is planar.

  8. Chain-growth polymerization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chain-growth_polymerization

    Chain-growth polymerization or chain-growth polymerisation is a polymerization technique where monomer molecules add onto the active site on a growing polymer chain one at a time. [1] There are a limited number of these active sites at any moment during the polymerization which gives this method its key characteristics.

  9. Catenation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catenation

    A nonane molecule, consisting of nine carbon atoms in a chain with 20 hydrogen atoms surrounding it. In chemistry, catenation is the bonding of atoms of the same element into a series, called a chain. [1] A chain or a ring may be open if its ends are not bonded to each other (an open-chain compound), or closed if they are bonded in a ring (a ...