monomeeraddition
Monomeeraddition, in English often called addition polymerization or chain-growth polymerization, is a polymerization mechanism in which polymer chains grow by the successive addition of monomer units to active sites at the ends of the growing chains. In this mechanism, no low-molecular-weight byproducts are produced during the main growth step, distinguishing it from condensation polymerizations where small molecules are released.
The process generally proceeds through initiation, propagation, and termination (or chain transfer). Initiation forms reactive centers
Typical systems include radical polymerization of vinyl monomers (for example, ethylene, styrene, acrylates), ionic polymerization (anionic
Compared with step-growth polymerization, monomeeraddition polymerization often yields polymers with high degrees of polymerization and high