Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jul 17, 2026

Chain propagation

In chemistry, chain propagation is a process in which a reactive intermediate is continuously regenerated during the course of a chemical chain reaction. For example, in the chlorination of methane, there is a two-step propagation cycle involving as chain carriers a chlorine atom and a methyl radical which are regenerated alternately:·Cl + CH4 → HCl + ·CH3 ·CH3 + Cl2 → CH3Cl + ·Cl

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IUPAC definition

(in a chain polymerization) Chemical reaction between a chain carrier and a monomer that results in the growth of a polymer chain and the regeneration of at least one chain carrier.

Note 1: The recommended symbol for the rate constant for chain propagation in a homopolymerization is kp.

In chemistry, chain propagation (sometimes just referred to as propagation) is a process in which a reactive intermediate is continuously regenerated during the course of a chemical chain reaction. For example, in the chlorination of methane, there is a two-step propagation cycle involving as chain carriers a chlorine atom and a methyl radical1 which are regenerated alternately:

·Cl + CH4 → HCl + ·CH3
·CH3 + Cl2 → CH3Cl + ·Cl

The two steps add to give the equation for the overall chain reaction:

CH4 + Cl2 → CH3Cl + HCl

Polymerization

In a chain-growth polymerization reaction, the reactive end-groups of a polymer chain react in each propagation step with a new monomer molecule transferring the reactive group to the last unit. Here the chain carrier is the polymer molecule with a reactive end-group, and at each step it is regenerated with the addition of one monomer unit M: [ M ] n + M [ M ] n + 1 {\displaystyle {\bigl [}{\ce {-M -}}{\bigr ]}_{n}+{\ce {M}}\rightarrow {\bigl [}{\ce {-M -}}{\bigr ]}_{n+1}}

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References

References

  1. Chain reaction IUPAC Gold Book