Glossary cho lĩnh vực polymer
Amorphous - having no ordered arrangement. Polymers are amorphous when their chains are tangled up in any old way. Polymers are not amorphous when their chains are lined up in ordered crystals. (see: crystal)
Anion - an atom or molecule which has a negative electrical charge. (see: ion)
Cation - an atom or molecule which has a positive electrical charge. (see: ion)
Complex - two or more molecules which are associated together by some type of interaction of electrons, other than a covalent bond. (see: covalent bond)
Copolymer - A polymer made from more than one kind of monomer. (see: monomer)
Covalent bond - a joining of two atoms when the two share a pair of electrons.
Crosslinking - crosslinking is when individual polymer chains are linked together by covalent bonds to form one giant molecule. (see: elastomer, thermoset)
Crystal - a mass of molecules arranged in a neat and orderly fashion. In polymer crystal the chains are lined up neatly like new pencils in a package. They are also bound together tightly by secondary interactions. (see: secondary interactions)
Emulsion - a mixture in which two immiscible substances, like oil and water, stay mixed together thanks to a third substance called an emulsifier. The emulsifier is usually something like a soap, whose molecules have a water-soluble end and an organic-soluble end. The soap molecules form little balls called micelles, in which the water-soluble ends point out into the water, and the organic-soluble ends point into the inside of the ball. The oil is stabilized in the water by hiding in the center of the micelle. Thus the water and oil stay mixed.
A micelle with the water-soluble ends of the soap molecule on the outside, and the organic-soluble ends pointing inward, stabilizing a big brown organic particle on the inside.
Entropy - disorder. Entropy is a measure of the disorder of a system.
First order transition - a thermal transition that involves both a latent heat and a change in the heat capacity of the material. (see: heat capacity , latent heat, second order transition, thermal transition)
Free radical - an atom or molecule which has at least one electron which is not paired with another electron.
Gel - a crosslinked polymer which has absorbed a large amount of solvent. Crosslinked polymers usually swell a good deal when they absorb solvents. (see: crosslinking)
Ion - an atom or molecule which has a positive or a negative electrical charge.
Ligand - an atom or group of atoms which is associated with a metal atom in a complex. Ligands may be neutral or they may be ions. (see: complex, ion)
Modulus - the ability of a sample of a material to resist deformation. Modulus is usually expressed as the ratio of stress exerted on the sample to the amount of deformation. For example, tensile modulus is the ration of stress applied to the elongation which results from the stress. (see: elongation, stress)
Plasticizer - a small molecule that's added to polymer to lower its glass transition temperature. (see: glass transition temperature).
Ring-opening polymerization - a polymerization in which cyclic monomer is converted into a polymer which does not contain rings. The monomer rings are opened up and stretched out in the polymer chain, like this:
Secondary interaction - interaction between two atoms or molecules other than a covalent bond. Secondary interactions include hydrogen bonding, ionic interaction, and dispersion forces. (see: hydrogen bond)
Second order transition - a thermal transition that involves a change in heat capacity, but does not have a latent heat. The glass transition is a second order transition. (see: first order transition, glass transition temperature, heat capacity, latent heat, thermal transition)
Strain - the amount of deformation a sample undergoes when one puts it under stress. Strain can be elongation, bending, compression, or any other type of deformation. (see: elongation, stress)
Strength - the amount of stress an object can receive before it breaks. (see: stress)
Thermoplastic - a material that can be molded and shaped when it's heated.
Thermal transition - a change that takes place in a material when you heat it or cool it. Examples of thermal transitions include melting, crystallization, or the glass transition. (see: glass transition temperature)
Thermoset - a hard and stiff crosslinked material that does not soften or become moldable when heated. (Compare thermosets with thermoplastics, which do become moldable when heated.) Also, thermosets are different from crosslinked elastomers. Thermosets are stiff and don't stretch the way that elastomers do. (see: elastomer, thermoplastic)
Toughness - a measure of the ability of a sample to absorb mechanical energy without breaking, usually defined as the area underneath a stress-strain curve. (see: stress, strain)