No, because alkanes are saturated, meaning they don't have any double bonds. Therefore there are no spare bonds to form polymers, which are plastics. Remember, monomers are single reactive molecules, and because alkanes have only one bond, they aren't very reactive and it takes a lot of energy to break them apart! Hope this helps!! :)
They can...
no
Three uses of alkanes are:used as organic solvents in labs when in liquid formused as a general anaestheticused as fuels because a large amount of energy is released when alkanes undergo combustion.
There are a few good advantages of Alkanes. They make great lubricants, are good fuels, and antiseptic for exterior uses.
True
By far the most important economic use for alkanes is their use as fuels. They are also used as lubricants and as non-polar solvents. They are largely unreactive, but can react with halogens such as bromine in the presence of sunlight to form halogenoalkanes, which are much more useful in organic synthesis.
While plastics are used as a common example of polymers, there are many other materials which are also polymers. Polymers include:anything plasticproteins, such as hair, nails, tortoise shellcellulose in paper and treesDNAsilly puttyrubber
Three uses of alkanes are:used as organic solvents in labs when in liquid formused as a general anaestheticused as fuels because a large amount of energy is released when alkanes undergo combustion.
monomers
They are used to make containers for medicines and also equipment.
Alkanes are easily oxidised and burning of alkanes are generally exothermic. The heat energy is used in fuel.
Polymers are used all around, plastics and rubber are polymers.
No. Amino acid monomers are used to make protein polymers. Nucleotide monomers are used to make DNA polymers.
An acetamidoacrylate is the acetamido derivative of an acrylate, used to make specialist polymers.
The ultimate source of natural sugar based polymers are plants. Plants make sugar (glucose) by photosynthesis. The glucose is then used to make polymers such as starch (amylose and amylopectin) and cellulose. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polysaccharide
There are a few good advantages of Alkanes. They make great lubricants, are good fuels, and antiseptic for exterior uses.
Synthetic polymers are cheaper than natural polymers. Natural polymers are also less plentiful.
True
it is when alkanes are used to form cracking.