What do you know about Polyester and Condensation Polymerisation?

Description

Test yourself on condensation polymerisation and polyesters in this quiz.
Alice Mercury
Quiz by Alice Mercury, updated more than 1 year ago
Alice Mercury
Created by Alice Mercury almost 9 years ago
337
1

Resource summary

Question 1

Question
A polyester is a [blank_start]polymer[blank_end] (a chain of [blank_start]repeating[blank_end] units) where the individual units are held together by [blank_start]ester[blank_end] linkages.
Answer
  • polymer
  • repeating
  • ester

Question 2

Question
Polyesters are polymers formed from a [blank_start]dicarboxylic acid[blank_end] and a [blank_start]diol[blank_end].
Answer
  • dicarboxylic acid
  • diol

Question 3

Question
Polyesters are extremely important polymers. Their most familiar applications are in these things: (Ticket all that are correct)
Answer
  • Clothing
  • Food packaging
  • Carbonated soft drinks bottles
  • Diet pills
  • Snake charming flutes
  • Plastic water bottles
  • Tattoos

Question 4

Question
PET stands for polyethylene terephthalate (PET). It is the most common thermoplastic polymer resin of the polyester family and is used in fibers for clothing, containers for liquids and foods, thermoforming for manufacturing, and in combination with glass fiber for engineering resins.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 5

Question
In Britain, PET may be referred to by its brand name: [blank_start]Terylene[blank_end]. PET consists of polymerized units of the monomer ethylene terephthalate, with repeating (C10H8O4) units.
Answer
  • Terylene
  • Doublecon
  • Lavasan

Question 6

Question
Can items made of PET be recycled?
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 7

Question
Why is polyester used for filling anoraks and bedding duvets?
Answer
  • To give good heat insulation
  • To provide bounciness
  • To give a plastic feel

Question 8

Question
In condensation [blank_start]polymerisation[blank_end], when the monomers join together a small [blank_start]molecule[blank_end] gets lost. That's different from [blank_start]addition[blank_end] polymerisation which produces polymers like poly(ethene) - in that case, nothing is lost when the monomers join together. A polyester is made by a reaction involving an [blank_start]acid[blank_end] with two -COOH groups, and an [blank_start]alcohol[blank_end] with two -OH groups.
Answer
  • polymerisation
  • molecule
  • addition
  • acid
  • alcohol

Question 9

Question
Additional Polymers are formed when many identical monomers join together to form a...
Answer
  • ... diamine.
  • ... nylon.
  • ... polymer.
  • ... monomer structure.

Question 10

Question
Polyesters are polymers in which the individual monomers are joined together by ester bonds. They are made by reacting a carboxylic acid with two COOH groups, and an alcohol with two –[blank_start]OH[blank_end] groups, or molecules with both a hydroxyl and [blank_start]carboxylic acid[blank_end] group, e.g. 4-hydroxy-benzoic acid. The reaction process is called [blank_start]esterfication[blank_end].
Answer
  • OH
  • carboxylic acid
  • esterfication

Question 11

Question
Benzene-1,4-dicarboxylic acid reacts with ethan-1,2-diol. These two compounds can link together to form a polymer, and so what molecule is lost (as a result of this ester linkage)?
Answer
  • CH
  • H2O
  • H
  • H2

Question 12

Question
Nylon 66 is a type of [blank_start]polyamide[blank_end] or nylon. Nylons come in many types, and the two most common for textile and plastics industries are nylon 6 and nylon 66. It has the chemical formula (C12H22N2O2)n
Answer
  • polyamide

Question 13

Question
Condensation polymerisation: Label the image below.
Answer
  • A diacid and a diol react
  • A polyester is formed

Question 14

Question
Hydrolysis of polyesters: Simple [blank_start]esters[blank_end] are easily hydrolysed by reaction with [blank_start]dilute[blank_end] acids or alkalis. Polyesters are attacked readily by [blank_start]alkalis[blank_end], but much more slowly by dilute acids. [blank_start]Hydrolysis[blank_end] by water alone is so slow as to be completely unimportant. (You wouldn't expect your polyester fleece to fall to pieces if you went out in the rain!) If you spill [blank_start]dilute[blank_end] alkali on a fabric made from polyester, the [blank_start]ester[blank_end] linkages are broken. [blank_start]Ethane[blank_end]-1,2-[blank_start]diol[blank_end] is formed together with the salt of the [blank_start]carboxylic acid[blank_end]. Because you produce small molecules rather than the original polymer, the [blank_start]fibres[blank_end] are destroyed, and you end up with a hole!
Answer
  • esters
  • dilute
  • alkalis
  • Hydrolysis
  • dilute
  • ester
  • Ethane
  • diol
  • carboxylic acid
  • fibres

Question 15

Question
Polyesters today are commonly used to produce trousers, skirts, sheets, boat sails and filling materials. Why are polyesters such a good choice for production of these particular things? (Tick all that are correct)
Answer
  • can rip easily
  • insoluble in water
  • linking of several esters within the fibers
  • strong
  • doesn't retain its shape
  • heat-resistant
  • takes a long time to dry out
  • reacts to most chemicals
  • reacts violently to water
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