Chemistry Investigatory Project
Chemistry Investigatory Project
Chemistry Investigatory Project
PROJECT
ON POLYMERS
PRESENTED BY :
VIDHISHA MAKEN,CLASS 12TH
SESSION-2019-20
CONTENTS
• ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
• GENERAL OVERVIEW
• SOME POLYMERS
• BIODEGRADABLE AND NON BIODEGRADABLE POLYMERS
• APPLICATIONS OF POLYMERS:
1. MEDICAL APPLICATIONS
2. SOME OTHER APPLICATIONS
• CONCLUSION
• BIBLIOGRAPHY
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
• I am very grateful to my chemistry teacher, Mr. RP sir , who has been
a constant source of inspiration and guidance. He supported me with
all my ideas and helped me to the maximum extend possible. He also
gave me enough extra time to find all the required information to
turn my ideas into a single project. This project would never have
existed, if it wasn’t for his passion to teach.
• I would also like to thank our lab assistant , and my friends who
helped me to collect the information required.
POLYMERS-GENERAL OVERVIEW
• A polymer is a large molecule (macromolecule) composed of repeating structural units
typically connected by covalent chemical bonds. While polymer in popular usage suggests
plastic, the term actually refers to a large class of natural and synthetic materials with a
variety of properties
Due to the extraordinary range of properties accessible in polymeric materials, they have come
to play an essential and ubiquitous role in everyday life - from plastics and elastomers on the
one hand to natural biopolymers such as DNA and proteins that are essential for life on the
other. A simple example is polyethylene, whose repeating unit is based on ethylene (IUPAC
name ethene) monomer (Image 2.1). Most commonly, as in this example, the continuously
linked backbone of a polymer consists mainly of carbon atoms. However, other structures do
exist; for example, elements such as silicon form familiar materials such as silicones, examples
being silly putty and waterproof plumbing sealant. The backbone of DNA is in fact based on
repeating units of polysaccharides (e.g. cellulose) which are joined together by glycosidic bonds
via oxygen atoms.
Natural polymers (from the Greek poly meaning “many” and meros
meaning “parts”) are found in many forms such as horns of animals,
tortoise shell, rosin (from pine trees), and from distillation of organic
materials. One of the most useful of the natural polymers was rubber,
obtained from the sap of the hevea tree. (Rubber was named by a chemist
found that a piece of solidified latex gum was good for rubbing out pencil
marks on paper. In Great Britain, erasers are still called “rubbers”.) Natural
rubber had only limited use as it became brittle in the cold and melted
when warmed. In 1839, Charles Goodyear discovered, through a lucky
accident, that by heating the latex with sulfur, the properties were
changed making the rubber more flexible and temperature stable. That
process became known as vulcanization.
The first synthetic polymer, a phenol-formaldehyde polymer, was introduced
under the name “Bakelite” (Image 2.2 & 2.3), by Leo Baekeland in 1909. Its
original use was to make billiard balls. Rayon, the first synthetic fiber was
developed as a replacement for silk in 1911. Although many polymers were
made in the following years, the technology to mass produce them was not
developed until World War II, when there was a need to develop synthetic
rubber for tires and other wartime applications and nylon for parachutes. Since
that time, the polymer industry has grown and diversified into one of the
fastest growing industries in the world. Today, polymers are commonly used in
thousands of products as plastics, elastomers, coatings, and adhesives. They
make up about 80% of the organic chemical industry with products produced at
approximately 150 kg of polymers per person annually in the United States.
SOME POLYMERS
AND THEIR PROPERTIERS
1. Polythene
(ii) High density
Polymer of ethylene or ethene.
polyethylene (HOP)
(i) Low density polythene (LDP)
3. Polyvinylchloride (PVC)
6. Polyacrylonitril
e
Alginates are a low-cost marine materials extracted from the cell walls of brown seaweed. Alginates are
salts of alginic acid. Naturally, alginates occur as calcium, magnesium and sodium salts. The very
important feature of alginates is that they can form hydrogel thanks to ion-crosslinking, for example Ca2+-
crosslinking. Chemically, alginates are linear copolymers containing blocks of (1,4)-linked β-D-
mannuronate (M) and α-L-guluronate (G) residues. The M/G ratio, G-block length and molecular weight
affect the physical and mechanical properties of alginate and resultant hydrogel.
Chitosan is cationic polysaccharide obtained from deacetylation of chitin built from (beta-1,4-
linked N-acetylglucosamine units. Deacetylation is used due to insolubility of chitin in common
solvents and difficult processing. Degree of the deacetylation has impact on crystallinity and
molecular weight of the chitosan. This cationic polymer can form electrostatic interactions with
negatively charged cell surfaces and also display antimicrobial activity. Thanks to ability of
chitosan to interact with glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) scaffolds based on chitosan can have a
direct impact on the modulation of cytokines and growth factors and thus local tissue
regeneration.
SOME MORE APPLICATIONS
• The use of polymer in agriculture is gaining popularity in science,
particularly in the field of polymer chemistry. This has provided
solutions to the problems of the present day agriculture which is to
maximize land and
water productivity without threatening the environment and the
natural resources. Superabsorbent polymer hydrogels potentially
influence soil permeability, density, structure, texture, evaporation
and infiltration rates of water through the soils.
Functionalized polymers were used to increase the efficiency of
pesticides and herbicides, allowing lower doses to be used and to
indirectly protect the environment by reducing pollution and clean-up
existing pollutants. This account; a detailed review study, has been
put together as an expose on the myriad application of polymer in the
field of agriculture, highlighting present research trend , impact on
food security and future outlook.
CONCLUSION
From the research we infer that polymers are classified in many
ways and are of various types,having numerous uses
The polymers can be natural semi synthetic or completely
synthetic.
These polymers can be used in variety of fields . They have
medical , agricultural and applications in various other fields .
They possess a wide range of physical,chemical and mechanical
properties.
Numerous biodegradable and synthetic polymers are available
and still being developed for sustained and targeted drug delivery
applications.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
NCERT TEXTBOOK
OTHER REFERENCE BOOKS
SUBJECT TEACHER
INTERNET