Ambition said:
1) Using an example to illustrate your answer, explain how the formation of an addition polymer is different to the formation of a condensation polymer.
How would you answers this?
2) What reactions, conditions and catalyst are required in th reaction of ethene with water?
3)Define the term weak in relation to acids?
1) a addition polymer forms by the joining of unsaturated monomers (or double bonded monomers) that form a long chain (polymer) by breaking their double bonds. (if this question is worth more than 2marks then i would probably talk more specificially about the process, like a catalyst is used to initiate the monomers so they can react with each other, forming a free radical, then they keep linking until the reaction is terminated by another long chain with a free radical)
for eg. polyethylene is a addition polymer formed from ethylene monomers
n(C2H4) ---> -(C2H4)-n
a condensation polymer forms usually from monomers of two different function groups that link together with elimination of a small molecule/ usually water. Cellulose is a condensation polymer formed from glucose monomers:
n(C6H12O6) --------> -(C6H12O6)-n + H2O
2) Ethene reacts with water to form ethanol with the presence of dilute sulfuric acid, this reaction is called hydration.
C2H4(g) + H2O(l)----->C2H5OH(aq)
3) Weak acids can only partically ionise/dissociate H+ in water (this means it forms an equilibrium), thus their pH is normally higher than it is supposed to be because there are less H+ dissolved.
for example, acetic acid CH3COOH is a weak acid that only partially ionise in water.
CH3COOH(aq)<-------> CH3COO- (aq) + H+(aq)
hope that helps