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  2. Methyl methacrylate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methyl_methacrylate

    MMA is a raw material for the manufacture of other methacrylates. These derivatives include ethyl methacrylate (EMA), butyl methacrylate (BMA) and 2-ethyl hexyl methacrylate (2-EHMA). Methacrylic acid (MAA) is used as a chemical intermediate as well as in the manufacture of coating polymers, construction chemicals and textile applications.

  3. Mayo–Lewis equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mayo–Lewis_equation

    However, in the event of crosspolymerization adding the other monomer, the chain-end will continue to add the new monomer and form a block copolymer.. If both ratios are near 1, a given monomer will add the two monomers with comparable speeds and a statistical or random copolymer is formed.

  4. Hierarchical editing language for macromolecules - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierarchical_Editing...

    Monomer; Atom; Monomers are assigned short unique identifiers in internal HELM databases and can be represented by the identifier in strings. The approach is similar to that used in Simplified molecular-input line-entry system (SMILES). An exchangeable file format allows sharing of data between companies who have assigned different identifiers ...

  5. Macromonomer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macromonomer

    Due to the larger size of macromonomers (as opposed to the size of regular monomers), synthetic challenges are brought about, giving reason for the analysis of polymerization mechanisms. Recent studies have shown that macromonomer polymerization kinetics and mechanisms can be significantly affected by the topological effect.

  6. Molar mass distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molar_mass_distribution

    The mass-average molecular mass, M w, is also related to the fractional monomer conversion, p, in step-growth polymerization (for the simplest case of linear polymers formed from two monomers in equimolar quantities) as per Carothers' equation: ¯ = + ¯ = (+), where M o is the molecular mass of the repeating unit.

  7. Composition drift - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Composition_drift

    Composition drift in some degree will occur unless the reactivity ratios for both monomers are equal to 1. In this case, each monomer prefers reaction with itself and the other monomer equally. This causes equal rates of consumption for copolymer formation and leads to random copolymerization. [3]

  8. Living polymerization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Living_polymerization

    Fast and complete initiation of the monomer. This means that the rate at which an initiating agent activates the monomer for polymerization, must happen very quickly. How many monomers make up each polymer (the degree of polymerization) must be related linearly to the amount of monomer you started with. The dispersity of the polymer must be < 1 ...

  9. Methacrylic acid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methacrylic_acid

    Methacrylic acid, abbreviated MAA, is an organic compound with the formula CH 2 =C(CH 3)CO 2 H. This colorless, viscous liquid is a carboxylic acid with an acrid unpleasant odor.