Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Some physical techniques for studying polymers
- 3 Molecular sizes and shapes and ordered structures
- 4 Regular chains and crystallinity
- 5 Morphology and motion
- 6 Mechanical properties I – time-independent elasticity
- 7 Mechanical properties II – linear viscoelasticity
- 8 Yield and fracture of polymers
- 9 Electrical and optical properties
- 10 Oriented polymers I – production and characterisation
- 11 Oriented polymers II – models and properties
- 12 Polymer blends, copolymers and liquid-crystal polymers
- Appendix: Cartesian tensors
- Solutions to problems
- Index
3 - Molecular sizes and shapes and ordered structures
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Some physical techniques for studying polymers
- 3 Molecular sizes and shapes and ordered structures
- 4 Regular chains and crystallinity
- 5 Morphology and motion
- 6 Mechanical properties I – time-independent elasticity
- 7 Mechanical properties II – linear viscoelasticity
- 8 Yield and fracture of polymers
- 9 Electrical and optical properties
- 10 Oriented polymers I – production and characterisation
- 11 Oriented polymers II – models and properties
- 12 Polymer blends, copolymers and liquid-crystal polymers
- Appendix: Cartesian tensors
- Solutions to problems
- Index
Summary
Introduction
This chapter is concerned primarily, in section 3.3, with factors that determine the shapes that individual polymer molecules can take up, both on the local scale of a few repeat units and on the scale of the complete molecule. It is shown that, if a polymer molecule is in a particular kind of solution or in a melt of like molecules, its most likely state is a so-called random coil with a statistically well-defined size. This coil has an open structure that can be penetrated by chain segments belonging to other coils, so that the chains in a molten polymer are likely to be highly overlapping, or entangled, if the molar mass is high. In addition, as discussed in the following section, the molecules do not all have the same length. At first sight these two factors appear to make it unlikely that a polymer could crystallise on cooling, so that it might be expected that polymer solids would be rather structureless. However, in section 3.4 experimental evidence showing that this is not necessarily so is presented and the various ordered structures are discussed further in subsequent chapters.
Distributions of molar mass and their determination
In section 1.3.1 it is pointed out that polymers, unlike other chemical compounds, do not have fixed molar masses. The molar masses are very high and there is a distribution of molar masses, or chain lengths, that depends on the polymerisation conditions.
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- An Introduction to Polymer Physics , pp. 63 - 86Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002
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