polymers

listen to the pronunciation of polymers
English - Turkish
polimerler
polymers and polymerization
polimerler ve polimerleşme
polymer
(Tekstil) polimer Açıklama: Monemerlerin bir araya gelerek kimyasal reaksiyonlarla oluşturduğu uzun molekül zincirine denir
polymer
(Diş Hekimliği) Aynı maddenin bir veya daha fazla molekülünün birleşmesi ile ortaya çıkar ürün
polymer
(isim) polimer
polymer
polimer
polymer
çoğuz
polymer
(Tıp) Elementlerinin ağırlık oranları bir olup ta molekül ağırlıkları farklı olan mürekkeplerden biri, polimer
silicone polymers
silikon polimerler
vinyl polymers
(fiil)nil polimeri
vinyl polymers
vinil polimeri
English - English
Long chains of chemicals, that can be twisted and molded into products Petroleum is heated at very high temperatures to be broken down into polymers and made into plastic
These include the familiar plastic and rubber materials Many of them are organic compounds that are chemically based on carbon, hydrogen, and other nonmetallic elements; they have very large molecular structures These materials typically have low densities and may be extremely flexible
These are macromolecular materials constructed from simple molecules (=> Monomers) Both natural fibres and cellulose and synthetic fibres are polymers in their chemical makeup
plural of polymer
A chemical compound with many repeating structural units
Macromolecules formed by the chemical union of 2 or more identical combining units called monomers
Compounds of very high molecular weights that are made up of a large number of simple molecules which have reacted with one another
Compounds formed by the joining of smaller, usually repeating, units linked by covalent bonds These compounds often form large macromolecules (e g , polypeptides, proteins, plastics) [MeSH]
A high-molecular-weight organic compound, natural or synthetic, with a structure that can be represented by a repeated small unit, or mer
Under the Seventh Amendment a polymer is defined as a substance which: Consists of molecules which include a sequence of one or more types of monomer units (the reacted form of a monomer in the structure); Show a molecular weight distribution primarily due to differences in the number of monomer units in the individual molecules; Contain 50% or more by weight of molecules containing a sequence of at least three monomer units covalently bound to at least 1 other monomer unit or reactant; Contain less than 50% by weight of molecules with the same molecular weight A polymer becomes notifiable when it contains 2% or more of a new substance as part of its structure Guidance on Polymer Notification
a complex chemical compound formed of many simpler units Cellulose is a sugar polymer and gelatin is an amino acid polymer
compounds of high molecular weight that are built up of a large number of simple molecules, or monomers
The chemical category of plastics
Long chains of covalently bonded atoms
Made from monomers such as ethylene, styrene or propylene, the most common being polyethylene, polypropylene and polystyrene
block polymers
plural form of block polymer
graft polymers
plural form of graft polymer
inorganic polymers
plural form of inorganic polymer
polymer
A long or larger molecule consisting of a chain or network of many repeating units, formed by chemically bonding together many identical or similar small molecules called monomers. A polymer is formed by polymerization, the joining of many monomer molecules
polymer
A material consisting of such polymer molecules
star polymers
plural form of star polymer
polymer
A MOLECULE composed of many similar or identical molecular subunits Starch is a polymer of GLUCOSE (Greek polus, manu + meris, part)
polymer
Polymers are large molecules of high molecular weight They consist of long, repeated and sometimes, branched chains, built up from small sub-units called monomers Natural polymers include proteins (polymer of amino acids) & cellulose (polymer of sugar molecules) There are many examples of synthetic polymers - e g PVC (a polymer of vinyl acetate), PTFE or Teflon (a polymer of molecules containing fluorine and carbon) PTFE is the basis of the Gortex® membrane There are several polymers (both natural and synthetic) used in Nikwax products to provide water-repellency and durability
polymer
A high molecular weight substance, natural or synthetic, which can be represented as a repeated small unit (monomer) A copolymer contains more than one type of monomeric unit
polymer
{i} complex compound made of many joined monomers (Chemistry)
polymer
A molecule composed of many smaller molecules, or monomers
polymer
a high molecular weight macromolecule made up of multiple repeating units
polymer
Large molecules built up by the combination of many small molecules through a chemical process called polymerization These molecules can consist of many thousands of atoms in chains or networks of repeating units
polymer
A high-molecular-weight organic compound, natural or synthetic, whose structure can be represented by a repeated small unit, the monomer (e g , polyethylene, rubber, cellulose) Synthetic polymers are formed by addition or condensation polymerization of monomer If two or more different monomers are involved, a copolymer is obtained Some polymers are elastomers, some plastics (Plastics Engineering Handbook of the Society of the Plastics Industry, Inc , edited by Michael L Berins, 1991)
polymer
A molecule composed of repeated subunits
polymer
A large molecule made by linking smaller molecules ("monomers") together
polymer
A polymer is a chemical compound with large molecules made of many smaller molecules of the same kind. Some polymers exist naturally and others are produced in laboratories and factories. a chemical compound that has a simple structure of large molecules (polymeres , from meros ). Any of a class of natural or synthetic substances composed of macromolecules that are multiples of monomers. The monomers need not all be the same or have the same structure. Polymers may consist of long chains of unbranched or branched monomers or may be cross-linked networks of monomers in two or three dimensions. Their backbones may be flexible or rigid. Some natural inorganic materials (e.g., the minerals diamond, graphite, and feldspar) and certain man-made inorganic materials (e.g., glass) have polymer-like structures. Many important natural materials are organic polymers, including cellulose (from sugar monomers; see polysaccharide), lignin, rubber, proteins (from amino acids), and nucleic acids (from nucleotides). Synthetic organic polymers include many plastics, including polyethylene, the nylons, polyurethanes, polyesters, vinyls (e.g., PVC), and synthetic rubbers. The silicone polymers, with an inorganic backbone of silicon and oxygen atoms and organic side groups, are among the most important mixed organic-inorganic compounds
polymer
A substance made of specific repeating chemical units or molecules The term polymer is often used correctly or incorrectly, in place of plastic, rubber or elastomer
polymer
A substance made of giant molecules formed by the union of simpler molecules Many water clarifiers are made from organic polymers An example would be polymerized ethylene, called polyethylene
polymer
A complex compound formed by the polymerization of one or more monomers
polymer
A substance made of repeating chemical units or molecules The term is often used in place of plastic, rubber, or elastomer
polymer
A long-chain molecule composed of repeated subunits
polymer
A substance made of many repeating chemical units or molecules The term polymer is often used in place of plastic, rubber or elastomer
polymer
substance formed by the linkage (polymerization) of two or more simple, unsaturated molecules ({see unsaturated hydrocarbon}, called monomers), to form a single heavier molecule having the same elements in the same proportions as the original monomers; i e each monomer retains its structural identity A polymer may be liquid or solid; solid polymers may consist of millions of repeated linked units A polymer made from two or more dissimilar monomers is called a copolymer; a copolymer composed of three different types of monomers is a terpolymer Natural rubber and synthetic rubbers are polymers
polymer
A molecule with a large molecular weight formed by the linking of 30 to 100,000 (or more) repeating units
polymer
(Chemistry) Any of numerous natural and synthetic compounds of usually high molecular weight consisting of up to millions of repeated linked units, each a relatively light and simple molecule (see monomer) Pulsar: A neutron star with a very fast rotational component and strong magnetic field, which constrains emitting radiation to a cone To be visible from Earth, a pulsar must be oriented such that the cone of emitted radiation intersects Earth Quasar: abbreviation of "quasi-stellar object" Quasars are unusually energetic objects which emit up to 1,000 times as much energy as an entire galaxy, but from a volume about the size of our solar system
polymer
Any one of two or more substances related to each other by polymerism; specifically, a substance produced from another substance by chemical polymerization
polymer
A large molecule built up by the repetition of small, simple chemical units high molecular-weight substance (from 10 000 to >20,000) formed in an association reaction in which many molecules come together to form one large molecule
polymer
A naturally occurring or synthetic substance consisting of giant molecules formed from smaller molecules of the same substance and often having a definite arrangement of the components of the giant molecules
polymer
Chemical compound composed of many molecules linked end to end to form a long chain molecule PVC is a polymer
polymer
A molecule made up from many similar smaller molecules called monomers Examples include PVC or poly-vinyl chloride and polyester
polymer
a large molecule produced by the linkage of smaller subunit molecules called monomers
polymer
a naturally occurring or synthetic compound consisting of large molecules made up of a linked series of repeated simple monomers
polymer
A polymer is a natural or synthetic compound of high molecular weight composed of long chains of repeating units, each relatively light and simple
polymer
polymeride
polymers

    Turkish pronunciation

    pälîmırz

    Pronunciation

    /ˈpäləmərz/ /ˈpɑːlɪmɜrz/

    Etymology

    [ 'pä-l&-m&r ] (noun.) 1866. International Scientific Vocabulary, back-formation from polymeric, from Greek polymerEs having many parts, from poly- + meros part; more at MERIT.
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