Experimental Evidence Shedding Light on the Origin of the Reduction of Branching of Acrylates in ATRP

被引:25
作者
Ballard, Nicholas [1 ,2 ]
Salsamendi, Maitane [1 ,2 ]
Ignacio Santos, Jose [3 ]
Ruiperez, Fernando [1 ,2 ]
Leiza, Jose R. [1 ,2 ]
Asua, Jose M. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Basque Country UPV EHU, Joxe Mari Korta Zentroa, POLYMAT, Donostia San Sebastian 20018, Spain
[2] Univ Basque Country UPV EHU, Joxe Mari Korta Zentroa, Grp Ingn Quim, Dpto Quim Aplicada, Donostia San Sebastian 20018, Spain
[3] Univ Basque Country UPV EHU, Joxe Mari Korta Zentroa, NMR Facil, SGIKER, Donostia San Sebastian 20018, Spain
关键词
N-BUTYL ACRYLATE; FREE-RADICAL POLYMERIZATION; INTRAMOLECULAR CHAIN TRANSFER; POLARIZABLE CONTINUUM MODEL; PULSED-LASER POLYMERIZATION; CORRELATED MOLECULAR CALCULATIONS; PROPAGATION RATE COEFFICIENT; GAUSSIAN-BASIS SETS; EMULSION POLYMERIZATION; POLY(BUTYL ACRYLATE);
D O I
10.1021/ma4025637
中图分类号
O63 [高分子化学(高聚物)];
学科分类号
070305 ; 080501 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Intramolecular chain transfer to polymer and subsequent propagation of tertiary radicals cause extensive branching in radical polymerization of acrylic monomers. Studies in the literature have shown that under controlled radical polymerization conditions the extent of branching is significantly reduced. There are two competing theories to explain this effect. In one, the cause of reduced branching is attributed to a reduction in the number of backbiting events, and in the other that has been specifically applied to atom-transfer radical polymerization (ATRP), the cause is due to trapping of the tertiary radical by a fast deactivation step. In this article we show that trapping of the tertiary radical is not the cause for the reduction in branching fraction. This is shown by the absence of the corresponding patched midchain bromide structure as revealed by quantitative C-13 NMR and by the ability to chain extend from a poly(butyl acrylate-co-butyl 2-bromoacrylate) copolymer by ATRP. These results are complemented by quantum mechanical computations.
引用
收藏
页码:964 / 972
页数:9
相关论文
共 54 条
  • [11] Chain transfer to polymer in free-radical bulk and emulsion polymerization of vinyl acetate studied by NMR spectroscopy
    Britton, D
    Heatley, F
    Lovell, PA
    [J]. MACROMOLECULES, 1998, 31 (09) : 2828 - 2837
  • [12] PLP Labeling in ESR spectroscopic analysis of secondary and tertiary acrylate propagating radicals
    Buback, Michael
    Hesse, Pascal
    Junkers, Thomas
    Sergeeva, Tatiana
    Theist, Thomas
    [J]. MACROMOLECULES, 2008, 41 (02) : 288 - 291
  • [13] A new integral equation formalism for the polarizable continuum model: Theoretical background and applications to isotropic and anisotropic dielectrics
    Cances, E
    Mennucci, B
    Tomasi, J
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 1997, 107 (08) : 3032 - 3041
  • [14] Cartwright D., 1983, U.S. Patent, Patent No. [4,414,391, 4414391]
  • [15] Detection and quantification of branching in polyacrylates by size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) and melt-state 13C NMR spectroscopy
    Castignolles, Patrice
    Graf, Robert
    Parkinson, Matthew
    Wilhelm, Manfred
    Gaborieau, Marianne
    [J]. POLYMER, 2009, 50 (11) : 2373 - 2383
  • [16] Independent control of sol molar mass and gel content in acrylate polymer/latexes
    Chauvet, J
    Asua, JA
    Leiza, JR
    [J]. POLYMER, 2005, 46 (23) : 9555 - 9561
  • [17] Ab initio study of solvated molecules: A new implementation of the polarizable continuum model
    Cossi, M
    Barone, V
    Cammi, R
    Tomasi, J
    [J]. CHEMICAL PHYSICS LETTERS, 1996, 255 (4-6) : 327 - 335
  • [18] A Density Functional Theory Study of Secondary Reactions in n-Butyl Acrylate Free Radical Polymerization
    Cuccato, Danilo
    Mavroudakis, Evangelos
    Dossi, Marco
    Moscatelli, Davide
    [J]. MACROMOLECULAR THEORY AND SIMULATIONS, 2013, 22 (02) : 127 - 135
  • [20] Structural characterization of nitroxide-terminated poly(n-butyl acrylate) prepared in bulk and miniemulsion polymerizations
    Farcet, C
    Belleney, J
    Charleux, B
    Pirri, R
    [J]. MACROMOLECULES, 2002, 35 (13) : 4912 - 4918