A condensation reaction (also known as a dehydration reaction or dehydration synthesis when water is lost) is a chemical reaction in which two molecules or moieties react and become covalently bonded to one another by the concurrent loss of a small molecule, often water, methanol, or a type of hydrogen halide such as HCl. It may be considered as the opposite of a hydrolysis reaction (the cleavage of a chemical entity into two parts by the action of water).
A high conversion rate is required to achieve high molecular weights as per Carother's equation.
In general, condensation polymers form more slowly than addition polymers, often requiring heat. They are generally lower in molecular weight. Monomers are consumed early in the reaction; the terminal functional groups remain active throughout and short chains combine to form longer chains. Bifunctional monomers lead to linear chains (and therefore thermoplastic polymers), but when the monomer functionality exceeds two, the product is a thermoset polymer.
Nearly all biological transformations are condensation reactions. Polypeptide synthesis, polyketide synthesis, terpene syntheses, phosphorylation, glycosylations, are just a few examples.
Kondensationsreaktion | Kondensacja (chemia) | Поликонденсация | Réaksi kondensasi | Kondensaatioreaktio | ปฏิกิริยาการควบแน่น | 缩合反应
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"Condensation reaction".
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