Module 6 Fundamentals of Polymer Chemistry
Module 6 Fundamentals of Polymer Chemistry
Module 6 Fundamentals of Polymer Chemistry
=
= =
1 1 i
i i
i
i
M N w w
=
= =
1
1
1 i
i
i
i i
i
i
n
N
N M
N
w
M
N = number of molecules
M = molecular weight
Weight-average molecular weight (M
w
)
determination of molecular weight based on size
rather than the number of molecules
the greater the mass, the greater the contribution to
the measurement
=
= =
1
1
2
1
1
i
i i
i
i i
i
i
i
i i
w
M N
M N
w
M w
M
w = weight fraction
M = molecular weight
N = number of molecules
Z-average molecular weight (M
z
)
some molecular weight determination methods
(e.g. sedimentation equilibrium) yield higher
molecular weight averages - M
z
=
= =
1
1
2
1
2
1
3
i
i i
i
i i
i
i i
i
i i
z
M w
M w
M N
M N
M
w = weight fraction
M = molecular weight
N = number of molecules
Example - a polymer sample consists of 9 molecules of
mw 30,000 and 5 molecules of mw 50,000
000 , 37
) 5 9 (
) 000 , 50 5 ( ) 000 , 30 9 (
1
1
=
+
+
= =
=
i
i
i
i i
n
N
N M
M
Number-average molecular weight (M
n
)
Consider the previous example - 9 molecules of molecular
weight 30,000 and 5 molecules of molecular weight 50,000
000 , 40
) 000 , 50 ( 5 ) 000 , 30 ( 9
) 000 , 50 ( 5 ) 000 , 30 ( 9
2 2
=
+
+
=
w
M
Weight-average molecular weight (M
w
)
Consider the previous example - 9 molecules of molecular
weight 30,000 and 5 molecules of molecular weight 50,000
136 , 42
) 000 , 50 ( 5 ) 000 , 30 ( 9
) 000 , 50 ( 5 ) 000 , 30 ( 9
2 2
3 3
=
+
+
=
z
M
Z-average molecular weight (M
z
)
A Typical Molecular Weight
Distribution Curve
200 000 400 000 600 000 800 000 1 000 000
M
i
(g mol
-1
)
10
4
w
i
1.0
2.0
3.0
4.0
M
n
= 100 000 g mol
-1
M
w
= 199 900 g mol
-1
M
z
= 299 850 g mol
-1
Molecular Weight Determination
In measurements of colligative properties, each
molecule contributes regardless of weight,
whereas in light scattering, the larger molecules
contribute more because they scatter light more
effectively.
For this reason, M
w
are greater than M
n
, except
when all molecules are of the same weight and
M
w
= M
n
Molecular Weight Distribution
The narrower the molecular weight range, the
closer are the values of M
w
and M
n
, and the
ratio M
w
/ M
n
may thus be used as an
indication of the breadth of the molecular
weight range in a polymer sample.
The ratio is called the polydispersity index,
and any system having a range of molecular
weights is said to be polydispersed
A Typical Molecular Weight
Distribution Curve
200 000 400 000 600 000 800 000 1 000 000
M
i
(g mol
-1
)
10
4
w
i
1.0
2.0
3.0
4.0
M
n
= 100 000 g mol
-1
M
w
= 199 900 g mol
-1
M
z
= 299 850 g mol
-1
Polymer Solution Viscosity
When a polymer is dissolved in a solvent and
then subjected to flow through a narrow
capillary it exerts a resistance to that flow. This
resistance is very informative.
It provides information on the size of the
polymer
Its Flexibility and shape in solution
Its interactions with the solvent it is disolved in.
Polymer Solution Viscosity
For dilute solutions the ratio between flow time of
a polymer solution (t) to that of the pure solvent
(t
o
) is effectively equal to the ratio of their
viscosity (q / q
o
)
o o
rel
t
t
q
q
q = =
( )
o
o
rel sp
t
t t
= = 1 q q
As this has a limiting value of unity, a more useful
quantity is specific viscosity (q
sp
)
Intrinsic Viscosity []
To eliminate concentration effects, the specific viscosity
(q
sp
) is divided by concentration and extrapolated to zero
concentration to give intrinsic viscosity [q|
| | | | c K
c c
H
o
o
sp 2
q q
q
q q
q
+ =
=
Thus plotting q
sp
/c vs c, the intercept is the intrinsic
viscosity [q| and from the slope, K
H
(Huggins constant,
typically between 0.3 - 0.9) can be determined
Intrinsic Viscosity Determination
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0
C (g dl
-1
)
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
c
o
o
q
q q
[q|
K
H
[
2
]
Intrinsic viscosity [q] can be related to molecular weight
by the Mark-Houwink-Sakurada Equation
Applicable for a given polymer-solvent system at a given temperature
| |
a
M K = q
Viscosity-Molecular Weight Relations
Log [q] vs log M (M
w
or M
n
) for a series of fractionated
polymers produces log K (intercept) and a (slope)
A wide range of values have been published
a ~ 0.5 (randomly coiled polymers)
~ 0.8 (rod-like, extended chain polymers)
K between 10
-3
and 0.5
Solvent Temp
o
C
K (x10
-3
)
ml g
-1
a MW
(x10
-3
)
Method
Cellulose
Cadoxen
Cuprammonium
25
25
33.8
8.5
0.77
0.81
20-100
10-100
SD
OS
Amylose
DMSO
Water
25
20
1.25
13.2
0.87
0.68
20-300
30-220
LS
LS
Dextran
Linear
Branched
Water
Water
25
34
97.8
10.3
0.50
0.25
2-10
80
LS
LS
Typical Mark-Houwink-Sakurada Equation Constants for
Several Polysaccharides
Solvent Temp
o
C
[q|
dl g
-1
a K (x10
-3
)
ml g
-1
MW
Kraft Lignin Dioxane 25 0.06 0.12 1638 50,000
Celluose CED 25 1.81 0.75 54.0 50,000
xylan CED 25 2.16 1.15 0.85 50,000
Typical Intrinsic Viscosities, a and K values for Several
Naturally Occurring Polymeric Materials
The degree of expansion or shape of the molecular coils
of a polymer can be ascertained from its a values (Table 2)
lignin (Newtonian sphere), cellulose (non-
freedraining coil) and xylan (freedraining coil)
Viscosity-average molecular weight (M
u
)
viscosity, like light scattering, is greater for the larger-
sized polymer molecules than the smaller ones, and is
much closer to M
w
than M
n
a
i
i i
i
a
i i
a
i
a
i i
M N
M N
M w M
1
1
1
1
1
1
(
(
(
(
=
(
=
+
=
u
w = weight fraction
N = number of moles
M = molecular weight
a = A constant
When a = 1, M
u
= M
w
, usually a ~ 0.5-0.9
a is a measure of the the hydrodynamic volume of the
polymer
varies with polymer, solvent and temperature
Polymer Morphology
The ultimate properties of any polymer (plastic,
fiber, or rubber) result from a combination of
molecular weight and chemical structure.
Polymers require a
particular MW, which
depends largely on the
chemical structure, to
have desirable
mechanical properties.
Molecular Weight
Mechanical Property
Polymer Morphology
The mechanical properties result from attractive
forces between molecules
dipole-dipole interactions, H-bonding, induction forces,
London forces or ionic bonding, ion-dipole interactions
C
O
O
R
C
O
O
R
o+
o+
o-
o-
C
H
N
O
R
C
H
N
O
R
o+
o+
o-
o-
A lower MW polyamide will produce good fiber
properties as compared to the polyester H-bonding
H-bonding
dipole-dipole
Hydrogen Bonding
A dipole-dipole interaction for hydrogens bonded to
electronegative elements
Electrostatic Interaction
Polymer Morphology
H
O
R
H
O
R
H
O
R
H
O
R
Weak bond ~ 5 kcal mol
-1
(c-c ~ 81 kcal mol
-1
)
Require short bond distance ~ 2.5 (c-c ~ 1.46)
very important
in cellulose
Polymer Morphology
Intermolecular forces drop off very rapidly with
distance important polymer molecules be able to pack
together closely to achieve maximum cohesive strength.
ex. Natural Rubber
unstretched state - molecules are randomly distributed
low modulus
stretched state - molecules become aligned, at 600%
elongation high modulus
(2000 times higher than unstretched)
unstretched - amorphous / stretched - crystalline