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polymerization |
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polymerizationAny process in which monomers combine chemically to produce a polymer. The monomer molecules—which in the polymer usually number from at least 100 to many thousands—may or may not all be the same. In nature, enzymes carry out polymerization under ordinary conditions to form proteins, nucleic acids, and carbohydrate polymers; in industry, the reaction is usually done with a catalyst, often under high pressure or heat. In addition polymerization, monomers are added successively to the reactive ends of a growing polymer molecule, similar to adding links to a chain; during the reactions, no by-products are formed. In condensation polymerization, growth of the polymer advances stepwise—monomers having reactive functional groups combine into larger molecules with their own functional groups; each reaction splits off a small molecule, often water, as a by-product. polymerization, polymerisation the act or process of forming a polymer or copolymer, esp a chemical reaction in which a polymer is formed polymerization [pə‚lim·ə·rə′zā·shən] (chemistry) The bonding of two or more monomers to produce a polymer. Any chemical reaction that produces such a bonding. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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His fields of activity include organic nitrations, oxidations, and arylations, polyimides, silicones, and new photo and thermal initiators for cationic and free radical polymerizations. These polymerizations proceed rapidly in a controlled fashion resulting in low polydispersity indices, the ability to prepare (co)polymers with pre-determined molecular weights and the ability to prepare materials with more advanced architectures including statistical and block copolymers. Xenoxyl stabilizer inhibits polymerizations of acrylic, styrenic and vinylic monomers. |
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