User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
- Any condensation reaction, of a monomer having two functional groups, which leads to the formation of a polymer (a polycondensate)
Extensive Definition
Step-growth polymerization is a polymerization process
that involves a chemical
reaction between multifunctional monomer molecules. In a
step-growth reaction, the growing chains may react with each other
to form even longer chains. This applies to chains of all lengths.
Thus, a monomer or dimer may react in just the same way as a chain
hundreds of monomer units long. This is in contrast to a
chain-growth polymerization, where only monomers may react with
growing chains (In chain-growth polymerization, two growing chains
can't join together the way they can in a step-growth
polymerization).
Irreconcilable Differences: One variety of
step-growth polymerization is called condensation polymerization
and the product a condensation
polymer because the chemical
reaction by which the monomer molecules bond is often a
condensation reaction that produces a small molecule byproduct.
A multifunctional monomer is a molecule that has more than one
potential reactive site by which it can form intermolecular chemical
bonds. The easiest way to visualize a step growth
polymerization is a group of people holding hands to form a human
chain: each person has two hands (=reactive sites).
A pioneer in step-growth polymerisation is
Wallace
Carothers who invented nylon, a condensation product of
hexamethylene
diamine and adipic acid.
Each monomer has two functional groups (two amino groups
or two carboxyl
group) and so each monomer can form an amide link with each of its
neighbour.
The functionality of a monomer is the number of
reactive sites. A functionality of 2 will yield a linear polymer.
Examples:
- hexamethylene diamine and adipic acid create nylon
- terephthalic acid and ethylene glycol create PET
A monomer with functionality 3 will introduce
branching in a polymer and will ultimately form a cross-linked
macrostructure. The point at which this three-dimensional structure
is formed is known as the gel point
because it is signalled by an abrupt change in viscosity. One of the earliest
so-called thermosets
is known as bakelite.
It is not always water that is released in
step-growth polymerization: in acyclic
diene metathesis or ADMET dienes polymerize with loss of
ethylene.
References
polycondensation in Bulgarian:
Поликондензация
polycondensation in German:
Polykondensationsreaktion
polycondensation in French:
Polycondensation
polycondensation in Dutch: Polycondensatie
polycondensation in Polish:
Polikondensacja