What Are Natural Polymers?
From trees to tires, from lunch to grocery bags, from breakfast cereal to school clothes: Polymers play an essential role in the human and natural world. As people become more environmentally aware, many are looking for ways to replace artificially created items with more sustainable substitutes. Polymers are no exception.
TL;DR (Too Long; Didn't Read)
**TL;DR (Too Long; Didn't Read)**
Examples of natural polymers include cellulose, chiton, carbohydrates like starches and sugars, proteins ranging from skin and muscle to spider silk and wool, DNA, RNA and natural rubber.
What are Polymers?
Polymers are long molecules made from monomers. "Poly" means many, and "mono" means one or single. "Mers" means parts. Polymers therefore means many parts, and polymers are made of many monomers or single parts. Different polymers form from different monomers. Also, when the arrangement of monomers changes, a different polymer may form.
Connecting the Monomers
Monomers connect in two different ways. In the first, the monomers connect directly, like building blocks linked together. These are called addition polymers. Many synthetic monomers form addition polymers. In the second kind of connection, the monomers release a water molecule when they link together. These are called condensation polymers. Most natural polymers are condensation polymers, so water is a natural byproduct of the linking monomers.
Natural Polymers
The millions of different kinds of protein polymers are all made from amino acid monomers. Although there are only 20 different kinds of amino acids, the many different combinations and arrangements result in a great variety of proteins. Some different types of protein polymers include:
• skin
• body organs
• muscles
• hair
• fingernails
• feathers
• hooves
• fur
A wide range of animal fibers, from wool to silk, come from protein polymers. Spider silk, one of the strongest fibers known, is a protein polymer. Leather, made from animal skin, results from protein polymers.
Synthetic or Artificial Polymers
Advantages of synthetic or artificial polymers include stability and consistency of the product. Synthetic rubber, for example, doesn't rot like natural rubber will. Synthetic rubber can also be customized for different purposes. Synthetic polymer examples include:
• nylon
• epoxies
• polyethylene
• Plexiglas
• Styrofoam
• Kevlar®
• Teflon®
From plastic containers to furniture to clothes to spray foam polymers, synthetic polymers permeate modern life.
Cite This Article
MLA
Blaettler, Karen G. "What Are Natural Polymers?" sciencing.com, https://www.sciencing.com/natural-polymers-8707376/. 8 August 2018.
APA
Blaettler, Karen G. (2018, August 8). What Are Natural Polymers?. sciencing.com. Retrieved from https://www.sciencing.com/natural-polymers-8707376/
Chicago
Blaettler, Karen G. What Are Natural Polymers? last modified March 24, 2022. https://www.sciencing.com/natural-polymers-8707376/