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Graft copolymerization grafting

Graft Copolymerization. Graft copolymers of cellulose and cellulose derivatives were prepared in a quartz reactor containing 0.5 g oven dried sample, 10 ml monomer and 100 ml water at 45°C. The grafting mixtures or solutions were photo-irradiated with the ultraviolet light of X > 254 nm and X >... [Pg.104]

Scheme 2 Ring-opening metathesis graft copolymerization (grafting-from approach) [25]. Initiator = Mo(N-2,6-Me2-C6H3)(CHCMe2Ph(OCMe(CF3)2)2, or Cl2(PR3)2Ru(=CHPh) (R = cyclohexyl). Scheme 2 Ring-opening metathesis graft copolymerization (grafting-from approach) [25]. Initiator = Mo(N-2,6-Me2-C6H3)(CHCMe2Ph(OCMe(CF3)2)2, or Cl2(PR3)2Ru(=CHPh) (R = cyclohexyl).
Graft copolymerization Graft copolymers are a type of branched copolymers with distinct side structures from the main chain. Graft copolymerization initiates the free radicals on cellulose molecule that can react with the hydrogen bonds on the matrix. Acrylic acid, acrylonitrile, and vinyl monomers are used for graft copolymerization of natural fibers. Equation 9.3 depicts the reaction of acrylonitrile with the fiber... [Pg.230]

In graft copolymerization using an initiator, grafting occurs preferentially via the primary radicals, whereas in thermal graft copolymerization grafting is initiated by polymer radicals [24,25]. [Pg.322]

In all manufacturing processes, grafting is achieved by the free-radical copolymerization of styrene and acrylonitrile monomers in the presence of an elastomer. Ungrafted styrene—acrylonitrile copolymer is formed during graft polymerization and/or added afterward. [Pg.203]

Uses. Vinyhdene fluoride is used for the manufacture of PVDF and for copolymerization with many fluorinated monomers. One commercially significant use is the manufacture of high performance fluoroelastomers that include copolymers of VDF with hexafluoropropylene (HFP) (62) or chlorotrifluoroethylene (CTFE) (63) and terpolymers with HEP and tetrafluoroethylene (TEE) (64) (see Elastomers, synthetic-fluorocarbon elastomers). There is intense commercial interest in thermoplastic copolymers of VDE with HEP (65,66), CTEE (67), or TEE (68). Less common are copolymers with trifluoroethene (69), 3,3,3-trifluoro-2-trifluoromethylpropene (70), or hexafluoroacetone (71). Thermoplastic terpolymers of VDE, HEP, and TEE are also of interest as coatings and film. A thermoplastic elastomer that has an elastomeric VDE copolymer chain as backbone and a grafted PVDE side chain has been developed (72). [Pg.386]

Gross-Linking. A variety of PE resins, after their synthesis, can be modified by cross-linking with peroxides, hydrolysis of silane-grafted polymers, ionic bonding of chain carboxyl groups (ionomers), chlorination, graft copolymerization, hydrolysis of vinyl acetate copolymers, and other reactions. [Pg.369]

Another use is of minor proportions of polyfunctional aHyl esters, eg, diaHyl maleate, ttiaHyl cyanurate, and ttiaHyl isocyanurate, for cross-linking or curing preformed vinyl-type polymers such as polyethylene and vinyl chlotide copolymers. These reactions ate examples of graft copolymerization in which specific added peroxides or high energy radiation achieve optimum cross-linking (see Copolymers). [Pg.80]

Although they lack commercial importance, many other poly(vinyl acetal)s have been synthesized. These include acetals made from vinyl acetate copolymerized with ethylene (43—46), propjiene (47), isobutjiene (47), acrylonitrile (48), acrolein (49), acrylates (50,47), aHyl ether (51), divinyl ether (52), maleates (53,54), vinyl chloride (55), diaHyl phthalate (56), and starch (graft copolymer) (47). [Pg.450]

Issues to be considered in selecting the best stabilizing system are polymeric chain branching which increases with high temperature and the presence of some stabilizers, polydispersity of the particles produced, and grafting copolymerization, which may occur because of the reaction of vinyl acetate with emulsifiers such as poly(vinyl alcohol) (43,44). [Pg.464]

Miscellaneous Copolymers. VP has been employed as a termonomer with various acryUc monomer—monomer combinations, especially to afford resins usehil as hair fixatives. Because of major differences in reactivity, VP can be copolymerized with alpha-olefins, but the products are actually PVP grafted with olefin or olefin oligomers (151,152). Likewise styrene can be polymerized in the presence of PVP and the resulting dispersion is unusually stable, suggesting that this added resistance to separation is caused by some grafting of styrene onto PVP (153). The Hterature contains innumerable references to other copolymers but at present (ca 1997), those reviewed in this article are the only ones known to have commercial significance. [Pg.534]

Thermoplastic elastomers are often multiphase compositions in which the phases are intimately dispersed. In many cases, the phases are chemically bonded by block or graft copolymerization. In others, a fine dispersion is apparentiy sufficient. In these multiphase systems, at least one phase consists of a material that is hard at room temperature but becomes fluid upon heating. Another phase consists of a softer material that is mbberlike at RT. A simple stmcture is an A—B—A block copolymer, where A is a hard phase and B an elastomer, eg, poly(styrene- -elastomer- -styrene). [Pg.11]

Copolymerizations of benzvalene with norhornene have been used to prepare block copolymers that are more stable and more soluble than the polybenzvalene (32). Upon conversion to (CH), some phase separation of nonconverted polynorhornene occurs. Other copolymerizations of acetylene with a variety of monomers and carrier polymers have been employed in the preparation of soluble polyacetylenes. Direct copolymeriza tion of acetylene with other monomers (33—39), and various techniques for grafting polyacetylene side chains onto solubilized carrier polymers (40—43), have been studied. In most cases, the resulting copolymers exhibit poorer electrical properties as solubiUty increases. [Pg.36]

A waterborne system for container coatings was developed based on a graft copolymerization of an advanced epoxy resin and an acryHc (52). The acryhc-vinyl monomers are grafted onto preformed epoxy resins in the presence of a free-radical initiator grafting occurs mainly at the methylene group of the aHphatic backbone on the epoxy resin. The polymeric product is a mixture of methacrylic acid—styrene copolymer, soHd epoxy resin, and graft copolymer of the unsaturated monomers onto the epoxy resin backbone. It is dispersible in water upon neutralization with an amine before cure with an amino—formaldehyde resin. [Pg.370]

Graft Copolymerization Onto Natural and Synthetic Polymers... [Pg.481]

Figure 1 Components of rough copolymer products in graft copolymerization. Figure 1 Components of rough copolymer products in graft copolymerization.
A number of metal chelates containing transition metals in their higher oxidation states are known to decompose by one electron transfer process to generate free radical species, which may initiate graft copolymerization reactions. Different transition metals, such as Zn, Fe, V, Co, Cr, Al, etc., have been used in the preparation of metal acetyl acetonates and other diketonates. Several studies demonstrated earlier that metal acetyl acetonates can be used as initiators for vinyl polymeriza-... [Pg.487]

In its simplest form the direct grafting method involves the irradiation of polymeric substrate in the absence or presence of oxygen. Graft copolymerization of the monomer to the polymer is then initiated through the free radicals generated in the latter. The reaction can be schematically written as ... [Pg.489]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.54 ]




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Graft copolymerization

Grafting copolymerization

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