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More organic chemistry - AQAAddition polymerisation

Alkanes, alkenes, alcohols and carboxylic acids are different homologous series of organic compounds. Naturally occurring and synthetic polymers can be formed from a variety of monomers.

Part of Chemistry (Single Science)Organic chemistry

Addition polymerisation

A is a substance of high , made up of small .

Poly(ethene)

Poly(ethene) is a polymer made from a very large number of ethene combined together.

Ethene molecules make long polyethene molecules.
Figure caption,
Forming poly(ethene) from ethene

The reaction is called a :

  • ethene is the
  • poly(ethene) is the polymer

The C=C double bond in ethene is involved in the polymerisation reaction. It allows ethene molecules to join together to form a single , so it is an example of an . Poly(ethene) is an .

Modelling addition polymers

It is too difficult to model a complete addition polymer molecule, as it contains many . Instead, we show the structure of its repeating unit, the part that is repeated many times. To deduce the structure of a polymer from the monomer:

  1. Draw the structure of the monomer but use C鈥揅 instead of C=C.
  2. Draw brackets around the structure with a long bond passing through each one.

The table shows the structure of ethene and its polymer.

Structures of a monomer and polymer including covalent bonds.

Modelling addition polymerisation

Equations use repeating units to model addition polymerisation reactions. The letter n stands for a large number.

Structure shift from ethene to poly(ethene) and choloroethene to poly(chloroethene).

Question

The diagram shows the structure of propene. Deduce the structure of poly(propene), and use this to show an equation for the polymerisation of propene.

Covalent structure of propene.