Sifat-Sifat Polimer
Sifat-Sifat Polimer
Sifat-Sifat Polimer
Plastic Products
Plastics can be shaped into a wide
variety of products:
Molded parts
Extruded sections
Films
Sheets
Insulation coatings on electrical wires
Fibers for textiles
J.S. Parent
10
Polymers: Introduction
Polymer: High molecular weight molecule made
up of a small repeat unit (monomer).
A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A-A
Polymer
Poly
mer
many
repeat
unit
repeat
unit
H H H H H H
C C C C C C
H H H H H H
H H H H H H
C C C C C C
H Cl H Cl H Cl
Polyethylene (PE)
repeat
unit
H
C
H
H H
C C
CH3 H
H H
C C
CH3 H
H
C
CH3
Polypropylene (PP)
Carbon chain
backbone
14
Types of Polymers
Polymer Classifications
Polymer Families
Common Polyolefins
Monomer
Ethylene
CH3
Propylene
Ph
Styrene
Polymer
Polyethylene
Polypropylene
Polystyrene
CH3
H3C
Vinyl Chloride
F2C CF2
Tetrafluoroethylene
CH3
Ph
Ph
Ph
Ph
Cl
Poly(vinyl chloride)
Repeat unit
Cl
F3C
Poly(tetrafluoroethylene): Teflon
Cl
F2
C
C
F2
Cl
F2
C
C
F2
Cl
F2
C
C
F2
CH3
Ph
F2
C
Ph
Ph
CH3
Cl
C
nF
2
Cl
F2
C
C
F2
Cl
F2
C
C
F2
CF3
16
17
18
CO2H
Terephthalic
acid
O
Polymer
O
OH
HO
Ethylene
glycol
Poly(ethylene terephthalate
HO
Nylon 6,6
O
CO2H H2N
HO2C
NH2
1,4-Diamino
benzene
Terephthalic
acid
H2
C
OCN
NCO
4,4-diisocyantophenylmethane
O
HO
H
N
H2
C
Kevlar
HO
Ester
O
NH2
OH H2N
4
1,6-Diaminohexane
H2 H2
O C C O H
HO
HO
4
Adipic Acid
O
4
N
H
N
4
H
Amide
O
H
n
H
N
H
N H
n
OH
HO
Spandex
Ethylene
glycol
O
H2 H2
H
N
O C C O H
n
Urethane linkage
19
Monomer
Isoprene
H OH
HO
HO
Natural Polymers
Polymer
Polyisoprene:
Natural rubber
HO
H OH
H
OH
H
H
-D-glucose
OH
Poly(-D-glycoside):
cellulose
Polyamino acid:
protein
R
Amino Acid
O P O
O
O
O
H3N
OH
Nucleotide
Base = C, G, T, A
Base
oligonucleic acid
DNA
OH
OH
H
H
N
R1
DNA
HO
O
HO
O
H3N
Rn+1
H
N
n
OH
Rn+2
O
O P O
O
O
DNA
Base
20
Rubbers
21
Polymer Classification
Polymers are commonly classified based
on their underlying molecular structure.
Polymers
Thermoplastics
Crystalline Amorphous
Elastomers
Thermosets
Polymer Classification:
Thermoplastic/Thermoset
One of the most practical and useful classification of polymer
compounds is based on their ability to be refabricated.
Thermoplastic: polymers that can be heat-softened in order to
process into a desired form.
Polystyrene, polyethylene
recyclable food containers
Thermoplastics and
The response ofThermosets
a polymer to mechanical forces at
elevated temperature is related to its dominant
molecular structure.
One classification of polymers is according to its
behavior and rising temperature. Thermoplastics and
Thermosets are the 2 categories.
A thermoplastic is a polymer that turns to a liquid
when heated and freezes to a very glassy state when
cooled sufficiently.
Most thermoplastics are high-molecular-weight
polymers whose chains associate through weak Van
der Waals forces (polyethylene); stronger dipoledipole interactions and hydrogen bonding (nylon).
27
Thermoplastics and
ThermoplasticThermosets
polymers differ from
thermosetting polymers (Bakelite, vulcanized
rubber) since thermoplastics can be remelted
and remolded.
Thermosetting plastics when heated, will
chemically decompose, so they can not be
recycled. Yet, once a thermoset is cured it tends
to be stronger than a thermoplastic.
Typically, linear polymers with minor branched
structures (and flexible chains) are
thermoplastics. The networked structures are
thermosets.
28
Examples of Thermoplastics
29
PTFE
http://www2.dupont.com/Teflon/en_US/index.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teflon
Elastomers (1)
Elastomer (2)
Crosslinked: A continuous
network of polymer chains is
a crosslinked condition. In effect,
there is just one polymer chain
of infinite molecular weight.
poly(ethylene), poly(butadiene).
Random copolymers: two monomers randomly distributed in chain.
AABAAABBABAABBA
poly(acrylonitrile-ran-butadiene)
Alternating copolymers: two monomers incorporated sequentially
ABABABABABABABAB
poly(styrene-alt-maleic anhydride)
Block copolymers: linear arrangement of blocks of high mol weight
AAAAAAAAAAABBBBBBBBBBBBBBBAAAAAAAA
polystyrene-block-polybutadiene-block-polystyrene or
poly(styrene-b-butadiene-b-styrene)
Graft copolymers: differing backbone and side-chain monomers
poly(isobutylene-graft-butadiene)
Copolymers
two or more monomers
polymerized together
random A and B
randomly positioned
along chain
alternating A and B
alternate in polymer
chain
block large blocks of A
units alternate with large
blocks of B units
graft chains of B units
grafted onto A backbone
random
alternating
block
graft
43
Copolymers can be used to tailor functionality or generate new phases and behaviors.
Poly(styrene)-block-poly(butadiene)
Graft copolymer,
example:
Poly(styrene)-graftpoly(butadiene)
bonding
Linear
Branched
Cross-Linked
Network
Molecular StructuresBranched
Linear
Branched
Cross-Linked
Network
Molecular Structures
Cross-linked, Network
secondary
bonding
Linear
Branched
Cross-Linked
Network
Tetrahedral
arrangement
of C-H
MOLECULAR WEIGHT
M n x i M i
M w w i M i
__
Mn = the number average molecular weight (mass)
Mi = mean (middle) molecular weight of size range i
xi = number fraction of chains in size range i
wi = weight fraction of chains in size range i52
size
Paucidisperse
Monodisperse
size
size
range from elastomeric (pressure sensitive) to semicrystalline (hot melt) to glassy (epoxy resins)
Plastics
broad class of materials whose properties are derived from
an amorphous phase and often from a crystalline phase
Fibres
highly crystalline materials
physical properties derived from degree of crystallinity
Coatings
must be applied as a low viscosity medium and cure to
produce satisfactory properties
Composition Distribution
Inclusion of two or more monomers in a material generates a
distribution of composition within, and between, polymer chains.
Changes to material properties can be pronounced:
Chemical properties: fibre dyeability, hot melt adhesive bonding
strength, solvent resistance
Phase transitions: crystallinity, Tg, Tm, phase separation
Mechanical properties: elasticity, modulus, toughness...
Random Copolymers
Materials comprised of a random distribution of different monomers
are the most widely employed industrial copolymers.
Compositions vary from essentially homopolymers to
materials containing equimolar quantities of constituent
monomers, depending on the application.
Compare:
Poly(acrylonitrile), Poly(butadiene) and Poly(acrylonitrile-cobutadiene)
Poly(ethylene), atactic Poly(propylene) and Poly(ethylene-copropylene)
Poly(acrylonitrile) and Poly(acrylonitrile-co-methyl acrylate)
Polyamides:
poly(caprolactam) - nylon 6
H O
Urethanes:
carbamate linkages through reaction
of diisocyanates and diols.
C O
N C
H O
N C O
Alternating Copolymers
Alternating copolymers are essentially -AB- homopolymers.
Condensation polymers are structurally of this class, but are
not considered alternating.
C N
poly(butadiene-ran-acrylonitrile)
C N
poly(butadiene-alt-acrylonitrile)
Segmented Polyurethanes
Schematic morphology of unstretched
semicrystalline polyurethane
copolymer (segmented block copolymer).
A:
hard nylon fibre
B:
bicomponent nylonspandex
C:
mechanical stretch
nylon
CHEE 890
J.S. Parent
D:
Graft-Modified Polyolefins
Functionalization of polymers is a cost-effective means of
developing specialty materials. Grafting of versatile functional
groups to polyolefins can improve blend performance and/or
enhance high-temperature properties.
A leading example is the melt grafting of maleic anhydride to
polyethylene to generate a material that improves adhesion
between polyethylene and nylon phases in toughened nylon parts.
ROOR
O
O
Polymer Synthesis
There are two major classes of polymer formation mechanisms
Addition polymerization: The polymer grows by sequential
addition of monomers to a reactive site
Chain growth is linear
Maximum molecular weight is obtained early in the
reaction
Step-Growth polymerization: Monomers react together to
make small oligomers. Small oligomers make bigger ones,
and big oligomers react to give polymers.
Chain growth is exponential
Maximum molecular weight is obtained late in the
reaction
Addition Polymerization
In*
A
Initiation
In
A*
Addition Polymerization
Propagation
In*
A
Initiation
In
A A*
Addition Polymerization
Propagation
In*
A
Initiation
In
A A A*
Addition Polymerization
In*
In
Initiation
A A A A*
nA
In
*A
In
A A A A A
A*
In
Propagation
A A A A A*
n
A A A A
m
A A A A A
In
*A
A A A A
A A A A A
n
Combination
B A A A A
m
Chain Transfer
New reactive site
is produced
Disproportionation
Termination
Reactive site is consumed
MW
MW
0
% conversion
100
A A A A A
k propagation
k ter mination
Initiation
Propagation
Termination
71
C3H7
Li
Ph
C4H9
Ph
Li+
C4H9
Ph
Ph
PhCO2
Ph
Cationic
Cl3Al OH2
Ph
Ph
Radical
PhCO2
Li+
Ph
Ph
n
H
Ph
HOAlCl3
PhCO2
Ph
H
Ph
Ph
Ph
HOAlCl3
Ph
Step-Growth Polymerization
n
Stage 1
Consumption
of monomer
Stage 2
Combination
of small fragments
Stage 3
Reaction of
oligomers to give
high molecular
weight polymer
Step-Growth Polymerization
Because high polymer does not form until the end of the reaction, high
molecular weight polymer is not obtained unless high conversion of
monomer is achieved.
Degree of Polymerization
1000
Xn = Degree of polymerization
p = mole fraction monomer
conversion
Xn
1
1 p
100
10
1
0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
Nylon-6,6
O
Cl
O
4
Cl
Adipoyl chloride
H2N
NH2
NaOH
Cl
O
HO
N
H
1,6-Diaminohexane
Adipoyl chloride
in hexane
O
4
O
N
H
Nylon 6,6
Diamine, NaOH, in H2O
N
H
6 carbon
diacid
6 carbon
diamine
Nylon-6,6
N
H
H
n
Nylon-6,6
Since the reactants are in different
phases, they can only react at the phase
boundary. Once a layer of polymer forms,
no more reaction occurs. Removing the
polymer allows more reaction to occur.
Adipoyl chloride
in hexane
Nylon 6,6
Diamine, NaOH, in H2O
81
Ancient Polymers
Naturally occurring polymers (those
derived from plants and animals)
have been used for centuries.
Wood
Cotton
Leather
Rubber
Wool
Silk
Cellulose
Rubber
Sifat-sifat Polimer
Thermoset data
Thermoset Properties
Mechanical properties of
Polymers
Hookes Law
Young's modulus, E, can be calculated by dividing the tensile stress by the extensional strain in the elastic
(initial, linear) portion of the stressstrain curve:
where
E is the Young's modulus (modulus of elasticity)
F is the force exerted on an object under tension;
A0 is the original cross-sectional area through which the force is applied;
L is the amount by which the length of the object changes;
L0 is the original length of the object.
Stress
Stress is "force per unit area" - the ratio of applied
forceFand cross section-defined as "force per area".
tensile stress- stress that tends to stretch or
lengthen the material - acts normal to the stressed
area
compressive stress- stress that tends to compress or
shorten the material - acts normal to the stressed
area
shearing stress- stress that tends to shear the
material - acts in plane to the stressed area at rightangles to compressive or tensile stress
Strain
In this equation E is the Modulus of Elasticity, is the applied stress in psi or ksi within the elastic limit,
and is the corresponding strain. Since strain does not have any units, E has units of psi or ksi. For
structural steel E 29,000 ksi. A smaller modulus of elasticity translates to more a flexible (or less rigid)
member.
Thermal properties
Permeability
Polymer Morphology
The ultimate properties of any polymer
(plastic, fiber, or rubber) result from a
combination of molecular weight and
chemicalrequire
structure.
Polymers
a Mechanical Property
particular MW,
which depends
largely on the
chemical
structure, to have
desirable
Molecular Weight
mechanical
Polymer Morphology
The mechanical properties result from attractive
forces between molecules
dipole-dipole interactions, H-bonding, induction forces,
London forces or ionic bonding, ion-dipole interactions
+
C
dipole-dipole
+ C
O
-
H
N
O
H
N
-
R
H-bonding
C
O
Polymer Morphology
Hydrogen Bonding
A dipole-dipole interaction for hydrogens
bonded to electronegative elements
Electrostatic Interaction
O
H
O
R
H
O
very important
in cellulose
Polymer Morphology
Intermolecular forces drop off very rapidly with
distance important polymer molecules be able to
pack together closely to achieve maximum cohesive
strength.
ex. Natural Rubber
unstretched state - molecules are randomly distributed
low modulus
stretched state - molecules become aligned, at 600%
elongation high modulus
(2000 times higher than unstretched)
unstretched - amorphous / stretched - crystalline
Overview
Morphology is a term that has slightly different meaning
depending on the words with which it is used. In
general it has to do with the form or structure of
whatever topic it is used to describe.
For our purposes, we will use it to describe the form or
structure of the polymer chains of thermoplastic
materials when they are in their frozen or solid state.
For thermoplastic resins, there are two basic
morphologies:
Amorphous
Amorphous polymers appear random and jumbled when
allowed to cool in a relaxed state. They appear very
similarly to their molten state, only the molecules are
closer together.
They can be described as being similar to a large pot of
spaghetti noodles.
Semi-crystalline
A portion of the molecular chains in semi-crystalline
polymers tend to fold-up into densely packed regions
called crystals as the polymer cools.
If more than 35% of the polymer chain will form these
crystals the polymer is classified as semi-crystalline.
Semi-crystalline
regions
Amorphou
s regions
Example
Think of Semi-crystalline materials like
ramen noodles. When in their solid state,
they have a compact ordered
arrangement
Example
Amorphous materials are like cooked ramen noodles in that there is a random
arrangement of the molecules and there are no crystals present to prevent
the chains from flowing
It is important to remember
that both materials have the
random, unordered
arrangement when molten
Degree of Crystallinity
There are many different factors that can determine the
amount of crystals or degree of crystallinity of a
plastic component.
Temperature
Temperature
For most materials, we are concerned with the melting
point and boiling point. These are the temperatures at
which the matter experiences a change of state
oSolid to Liquid
oLiquid to Gas
For thermoplastic materials, we are concerned with:
oGlass Transition Temperature
oMelting Temperature
once it
dips
-The amorphous portions of the chains have enough energy and the
molecules are far enough apart, that the molecules can continue to fold up
and unfold.
- The crystals are more easily pulled apart
- The material is more flexible
Ex. Polyethylene and Polypropylene both have low Tgs. They are
way below room temperature. That is why milk jugs and yogurt
containers are flexible when you take them out of the
refrigerator.
Orientation
When we talk about orientation in respect to polymer
materials, we are talking about the alignment of the
molecules.
Think of a polymer molecule like a broken rubber band
sitting on your
desk.
- As it flows, the molecule straightens out and
stretches
Orientation
Properties
You have already seen that there is a big difference
between the two basic morphologies of thermoplastic
materials.
These differences cause the different types of materials to
experience property differences.
Although the properties are mainly dependent on a
specific polymers structure, there are tendencies that
go with the specific morphologies.
This is why material selection is so important
to the plastics field.
If the wrong material is used for a specific application, it
can fail and cause damage or worse personal injury or
Properties
Chemical Resistance
Properties
Chemical Resistance
Properties
Optical Properties
Properties
Impact Resistance
Properties
Viscosity
Properties
Weather Resistance
Properties
Weather Resistance
Properties
Shrinkage
Material Types
Amorphous
Polyvinyl Chloride (PVC)
General Purpose Polystyrene (GPPS)
Polycarbonate (PC)
Polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA or Acrylic)
Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene (ABS a terpolymer)
Material Types
Semi-crystalline
Polyethylene (PE, HDPE, LDPE, etc.)
Polypropylene (PP)
Polyamides (PA Nylon)
Polyesters
Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET)
Polybutylene Terephthalate (PBT)
Polyoxymethylene (POM - Acetal)
Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE Teflon)
Morphologies
Amorphous structure random,
unordered
ex.
Polystyrene
Crystalline structure regular, order
ex.
Polyethylene,
Polypropylene
Polymer Microstructure
Polyolefins with side chains have stereocenters on every other carbon
n
CH3
Capable of crystallizing
155
Polymer Crystallinity
Polymers are rarely 100%
crystalline
Difficult for all regions
of all chains
crystalline
to become aligned region
Degree of crystallinity
expressed as % crystallinity.
-- Some physical properties
depend on % crystallinity.
-- Heat treating causes
crystalline regions to grow
and % crystallinity to
increase.
amorphous
region
156
2003 Brooks/Cole, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning is a trademark used herein under license.
Thermoplastics
The crystalline phases of such polymers are
characterized by their melting temperature
(Tm).
Many thermoplastics are completely amorphous
and incapable of crystallization, these amorphous
polymers (and amorphous phases of
semicrystalline polymers) are characterized by
their glass transition temperature (Tg).
the temperature at which they transform abruptly
from the glassy state (hard) to the rubbery state
(soft).
Thermoplastics
Glass transition temperature (Tg)
This transition corresponds to the
onset of chain motion
below the Tg the polymer chains are
unable to move and are frozen in
position.
Thermosets
Thermosets - normally rigid materials network polymers in which chain motion
is greatly restricted by a high degree of
crosslinking
As with elastomers, they are intractable
once formed and degrade rather than
melt upon the application of heat.
Elastomers
Elastomers - crosslinked rubbery
polymers - rubber networks - that can be
easily stretched to high extensions (3x to
10x original dimensions)
the rubbery polymer chains become
extended upon deformation but are
prevented from permanent flow by
crosslinking, and driven by entropy, spring
back to their original positions on removal
of the stress.
Polysaccharides
The size of polysaccharide molecules can vary,
occurring as polydispersed molecules that have
a range of 100 to 100,000 monosaccharide
units
MW 16,000 - 16,000,000 daltons
Molecular Weight
Distribution
others commonly used are weightaverage molecular weight (w), zaverage molecular weight (z) and
viscosity-average molecular weight
( )
Number-average molecular
weight (n)
based on methods of counting the
number of molecules in a given weight of
polymer
totalweight of a polymer sample, w, is
the
N = number of molecules
w the wsum
= each
molecular
weight
molecular
i ofNthe
i M i weightsMof
i 1
ipresent
1
species
Mn
N
i 1
M N
i 1
N
i 1
Weight-average molecular
weight (w)
determination of molecular weight
based on size rather than the number
of molecules
the greater the mass, the greater the
contribution
tothe measurement
2
w = weight fraction
wi M i N i M i
M = molecular weight
i 1
i 1
Mw
N = number of molecules
wi N i M i
i 1
i 1
Mz
3
N
M
i i
i 1
2
N
M
i i
i 1
wi M i
i 1
w M
i 1
w = weight fraction
M = molecular weight
N = number of molecules
mw 50,000
M i Ni
(9 30,000) (5 50,000)
i 1
Mn
37,000
(9 5)
Ni
i 1
9(30,000) 5(50,000)
Mw
40,000
9(30,000) 5(50,000)
2
9(30,000) 5(50,000)
Mz
42,136
2
2
9(30,000) 5(50,000)
3
4.0
3.0
2.0
1.0
200 000
400 000
600 000
800 000
1 000 000
Mi (g mol-1)
Mv Mn
Mw
#
o
f
m
o
le
cu
le
s
171
172
Polymer Melts
To shape a thermoplastic polymer it
must be heated so that it softens to
the consistency of a liquid
In this form, it is called a polymer
melt
Important properties:
Viscosity
Viscoelasticity
Figure 13.2
Viscosity as a
function of
temperature for
selected polymers
at a shear rate of
103 s-1
Viscoelasticity
Combination of viscosity and elasticity
Possessed by both polymer solids
and polymer melts
Example: die swell in extrusion, in
which the hot plastic expands when
exiting the die opening
Various Fillers