AQA A-Level Organic Chemistry 3.3.12 Polymers Comparing Polymers and Biodegradability
3.3.12

Comparing Polymers and Biodegradability

Chemical reasons for biodegradability differences, hydrolysis of esters and amides, and waste disposal options.

Every year, millions of tonnes of plastics are manufactured. Understanding the chemical properties that govern their stability: and their ability to decompose: is crucial for developing sustainable waste management solutions.

🔑 Key Principle

The differences in biodegradability between addition and condensation polymers arise directly from their chemical structures. Addition polymers consist of strong, non-polar carbon carbon single bonds, whereas condensation polymers contain polar ester or amide links that can be targeted by chemical reagents and biological enzymes.

Biodegradability Comparison

We can classify and contrast the stability of polymer chains based on their chemical composition:

Biodegradable Polymer

A polymer that can be broken down into small, non-toxic molecules by the action of living organisms: typically bacteria or fungi: over a reasonable timeframe.

1. Addition Polymers (Non-Biodegradable)

Addition polymers like poly(ethene), poly(propene), and PVC are made from alkenes. Their main backbone consists entirely of carbon carbon single bonds (\\( \text{C-C} \\)).

2. Condensation Polymers (Biodegradable)

Condensation polymers like polyesters (Terylene, PLA) and polyamides (Nylon, Kevlar) contain polar carbonyl groups (\\( \text{C=O} \\)) adjacent to oxygen or nitrogen atoms.

Hydrolysis of a Polyester Linkage 1. Ester Link + Water C δ⁺ O δ⁻ O Cleavage H₂O Hydrolysis Slow under neutral 2. Reconstructed Monomer Ends C O OH Carboxylic Acid H O Alcohol

Hydrolysis Reactions

Hydrolysis can be catalysed by acids or bases. You must be able to write the structural products formed under both conditions:

Acid Hydrolysis

The cleavage of an organic bond using water in the presence of an aqueous acid catalyst (e.g. dilute \\( \text{HCl} \\)).

Base Hydrolysis

The cleavage of an organic bond using water in the presence of an aqueous base (e.g. dilute \\( \text{NaOH} \\)). In this reaction, carboxylic acids are converted to their carboxylate salt forms.

✏️ Worked Example: Polyester Hydrolysis
Draw the structures of the organic products formed when the polyester repeating unit below is heated with excess aqueous sodium hydroxide: \[ \text{[-CO-C}_6\text{H}_4\text{-CO-O-CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{-O-]} \]

Step 1: Identify the link type. The polymer is a polyester, containing ester links (\\( \text{-CO-O-} \\)).

Step 2: Cleave the ester bonds. Breaking the ester bonds yields the starting monomers: benzene-1,4-dicarboxylic acid and ethane-1,2-diol.

Step 3: Adjust for alkaline (NaOH) conditions.

  • Ethane-1,2-diol is an alcohol and does not react with aqueous NaOH. It remains as \\( \text{HO-CH}_2\text{CH}_2\text{-OH} \\).
  • Benzene-1,4-dicarboxylic acid contains two acidic carboxylic acid groups (\\( \text{-COOH} \\)). These react with NaOH to form the sodium carboxylate salt: sodium benzene-1,4-dicarboxylate (\\( \text{Na}^+ \text{ } ^-\text{OOC-C}_6\text{H}_4\text{-COO}^- \text{Na}^+ \\)).

Answer: The products are sodium benzene-1,4-dicarboxylate and ethane-1,2-diol.

Environmental Considerations and Disposal Methods

Because plastics do not break down easily, choosing the appropriate disposal method is a major environmental challenge. You must be able to evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of each option:

Disposal Method Advantages Disadvantages
Landfill Cheap, easy to manage, requires no sorting of plastics. Wastes valuable land, visually polluting, addition polymers do not decay, risk of local environment contamination.
Incineration Reduces volume of waste dramatically, allows heat/energy recovery to generate electricity. Releases carbon dioxide (a greenhouse gas) and toxic gases (e.g. \\( \text{HCl} \\) from burning PVC, or toxic heavy metals from additives).
Recycling Saves precious crude oil resources, reduces land waste and carbon footprint. Sorting plastic types is difficult and expensive, requires washing and melting, down-cycling degrades polymer quality over time.

Photodegradable Polymers

To reduce plastic litter, scientists have developed photodegradable polymers. These polymers contain carbonyl functional groups incorporated into their addition backbones. The carbonyl groups absorb ultraviolet (UV) light, causing bonds in the main chain to break. This causes the plastic to break down into smaller pieces when exposed to sunlight.

📝 AQA Examiner Tip: Landfill and Biodegradability

Students often mistakenly state that because condensation polymers are biodegradable, they decompose rapidly in standard landfill sites. In reality, landfills are highly compacted and lack oxygen, moisture, and light. Under these anaerobic conditions, even biodegradable polymers take a very long time to decompose. Always clarify this distinction in your written answers.

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