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  1. Polymer - Wikipedia

    Polymers range from familiar synthetic plastics such as polystyrene to natural biopolymers such as DNA and proteins that are fundamental to biological structure and function. Polymers, both natural and …

  2. Polymer | Description, Examples, Types, Material, Uses, & Facts ...

    Jan 12, 2026 · polymer, any of a class of natural or synthetic substances composed of very large molecules, called macromolecules, that are multiples of simpler chemical units called monomers. …

  3. Polymers | Open Access Journal | MDPI

    Polymers is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal of polymer science published semimonthly online by MDPI.

  4. Polymers 101: What Are Polymers?, Classes, Types, and Common …

    Jan 15, 2025 · Based on this classification, there are two main types of polymers: natural and synthetic polymers.

  5. What Is a Polymer? - ThoughtCo

    May 16, 2025 · Polymers are chains of molecules that come in both natural forms like rubber and synthetic forms like plastic. Different properties of polymers, like elasticity or reflectivity, make them …

  6. What is a Polymer? - GeeksforGeeks

    Jul 24, 2025 · As natural polymers, i.e., DNA and RNA, is the reason for life on earth, without DNA we can't imagine life on earth. From well-known synthetic plastics like polystyrene to natural biopolymers …

  7. Polymer: Definition, Properties, Types, and Applications

    Mar 30, 2023 · Polymers are made of repeating steps of simpler compounds called monomers. Many chemicals have the potential to be polymerized into chains that make a material whose properties …

  8. Polymer - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics

    Polymer is a substance, constituent or material, which has a molecular build-up structure, either completely or chiefly from many similar or different particles or units that are bonded together.

  9. 7.9: Polymers and Plastics - Chemistry LibreTexts

    Polymers are constructed from relatively small molecular fragments known as monomers that are joined together. Wool, cotton, silk, wood and leather are examples of natural polymers that have been …

  10. Polymers - Science for Everybody

    Learn how polymers are formed through polymerisation, the difference between natural and synthetic polymers, their properties, and common examples like poly (ethene) and DNA.