Crystalline
Polymers
- Polymer
chemists use the term crystalline to describe the areas in a polymer where
the chains are packed in a regular way.
- Many
polymers have a mixture of crystalline (ordered) areas and amorphous
(unordered) regions.
- Amorphous
regions have more freedom of movement as the chains are further apart.
- Any
one polymer chain may be part of an amorphous region and a crystalline
region.
- Spaghetti
is a good representation of the different areas; when looking at the
underside of a clear glass bowl containing spaghetti some regions of the
spaghetti are grouped together in a regular layout, while other regions
are totally mixed up.
- Polymers
with regular chain structures (e.g. isotactic polypropene) and without
bulky side groups or extensive chain branching are the most likely to form
crystalline regions.
- The
percentage of crystallinity in a polymer is important in determining its
properties; the more crystalline a polymer is, the stronger and less
flexible it becomes.