{"term":{"id":"15311","title":"helical polymer","longtitle":"IUPAC Gold Book - helical polymer","doi":"10.1351\/goldbook.15311","code":"15311","status":"current","definitions":[{"id":1,"text":"Polymer composed of macromolecules that adopt partly or completely a helical conformation.  \n\n","notes":{"1":"Biopolymers such as nucleic acids, amylose, and some proteins are typical helical polymers.","2":"A helical structure is generated by regularly repeating rotations around the backbone bonds of a linear macromolecule."},"sources":["PAC, 2009, 81, 1131. 'Glossary of class names of polymers based on chemical structure and molecular architecture (IUPAC Recommendations 2009)' on page 1178 (https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1351\/PAC-REC-08-01-30)"]}],"altoutputs":{"html":"https:\/\/goldbook.iupac.org\/terms\/view\/15311\/html","xml":"https:\/\/goldbook.iupac.org\/terms\/view\/15311\/xml","plain":"https:\/\/goldbook.iupac.org\/terms\/view\/15311\/plain"},"citation":"Citation: 'helical polymer' in IUPAC Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 5th ed. International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry; 2025. Online version 5.0.0, 2025. 10.1351\/goldbook.15311","license":"The IUPAC Gold Book is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike CC BY-SA 4.0 International (https:\/\/creativecommons.org\/licenses\/by-sa\/4.0\/) for individual terms.","collection":"If you are interested in licensing the Gold Book for commercial use, please contact the IUPAC Executive Director at executivedirector@iupac.org .","disclaimer":"The International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) is continuously reviewing and, where needed, updating terms in the Compendium of Chemical Terminology (the IUPAC Gold Book). Users of these terms are encouraged to include the version of a term with its use and to check regularly for updates to term definitions that you are using.","accessed":"2026-05-20T16:22:08+00:00"}}