essentially, oil
2006-11-19 02:26:40
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answer #1
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answered by cereal killer 5
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Plastic
2006-11-19 10:31:50
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answer #2
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answered by lulu 6
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Plastic covers a range of synthetic or semisynthetic polymerization products. They are composed of organic condensation or addition polymers and may contain other substances to improve performance or economics. There are few natural polymers generally considered to be "plastics". Plastics can be formed into objects or films or fibers. Their name is derived from the fact that many are malleable, having the property of plasticity. Plastic can be classified in many ways but most commonly by their polymer backbone (polyvinyl chloride, polyethylene, acrylic, silicone, urethane, etc.). Other classifications include thermoplastic vs. thermoset, elastomer, engineering plastic, addition or condensation, and Glass transition temperature or Tg.
A lot of plastics are partially crystalline and partially amorphous in molecular structure, giving them both a melting point (the temperature at which the attractive intermolecular forces are overcome) and one or more glass transitions (temperatures at which the degree of cross-linking is substantially reduced).
Plastics are polymers: long chains of atoms bonded to one another. These chains are made up of many repeating molecular units, or "monomers". The vast majority of plastics are composed of polymers of carbon alone or with oxygen, nitrogen, chlorine or sulfur in the backbone. (Some of commercial interest are silicon based.) The backbone is that part of the chain on the main "path" linking the multitude of monomer units together. To customize the properties of a plastic, different molecular groups "hang" from the backbone (usually they are "hung" as part of the monomers before linking monomers together to form the polymer chain). This customization by pendant groups has allowed plastics to become such an indispensable part of twenty first-century life by fine tuning the properties of the polymer.
People experimented with plastics based on natural polymers for centuries. In the nineteenth century they discovered plastics based on chemically modified natural polymers: Charles Goodyear discovered vulcanization of rubber (1839) and Alexander Parkes discovered cellulose-based plastics in the 1860s. The first plastic based on a synthetic polymer was called Bakelite and was created by Leo Hendrik Baekeland in 1907.
The development of plastics has come from the use of natural materials (e.g., chewing gum, shellac) to the use of chemically modified natural materials (e.g., natural rubber, nitrocellulose) and finally to completely manmade molecules (e.g., epoxy, polyvinyl chloride, polyethylene).
2006-11-19 10:38:10
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Hydrocarbon polymers. A hydrocarbon is a chain of carbon atoms bound to each other and hydrogen atoms with varios active sites at each end of the chain. These join together to form a long molecule, each section of which is called a mer. A long chain of mers is called a polymer.
2006-11-19 10:34:05
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Refined crude oil fractions.
Basically 'light' hydrocarbons, i.e. ethane, propane, butane etc. which are short chain carbon molecules, being treated/refined by various processes to give various long-chain hydro-carbon molecules, usually the best known are repeating identical light hydrocarbons:- ethane to give poly-ethane.
Not sure but think poly is from the Greek meaning many.
Hope this helps?
2006-11-23 07:55:26
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answer #5
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answered by Daedalus 3
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they all start life as oil and are transformed (some might say magically) into the various forms of plastics available
2006-11-19 10:34:14
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answer #6
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answered by kimbridge 4
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plastic
2006-11-19 10:31:36
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answer #7
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answered by forest lover 2
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Mainly hydrocarbons I believe
The process used to make plastics is called polymerisation
2006-11-19 10:27:16
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answer #8
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answered by don't stop the music ♪ 6
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plastic...? nah sorry i dont know but thank you for the 2 points ;-)
2006-11-19 10:27:40
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answer #9
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answered by entangld 2
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Bubblin crude, Texas tea, black gold. Oil that is.
2006-11-19 10:27:22
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answer #10
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answered by G-Man 3
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a ploymerastion of oil
2006-11-19 14:08:23
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answer #11
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answered by curryator 2
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