Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Homopolymerizations methylmethacrylate

In addition to the polymerization of dienes the versatility of NdP-based catalysts is exceptional regarding the number of different non-diene monomers which can be polymerized with these catalysts. Acetylene is polymerized by the binary catalyst system NdP/AlEt3 [253,254]. Lactides are polymerized by the ternary system NdP/AlEt3/H20 [255,256]. NdP/TIBA systems are applied in the copolymerization of carbon dioxide and epichlorhy-drine [257] as well as for the block copolymerization of IP and epichloro-hydrin [258]. The ternary catalyst system NdP/MgBu2/TMEDA allows for the homopolymerization of polar monomers such as acrylonitrile [259] and methylmethacrylate [260]. The quaternary system NdP/MgBu2/AlEt3/HMPTA is used for the polymerization of styrene [261]. [Pg.23]

Equation (26) is the ideal copolymer composition equation suggested [203] early in the development of copolymerization theory but which had to be abandoned in favour of eqn. (23) as a general description of radical copolymerization. Only in this particular case are the rates of incorporation of each monomer proportional to their homopolymerization rates. It was shown that the reactivity of a series of monomers in stannic chloride initiated copolymerization followed the same order as their homopolymerization rates [202] and so eqn. (26) could be at least qualitatively correct for carbonium-ion polymerizations and possibly for reactions carried by carbanions. This, in fact, does not seem to be correct for anionic polymerizations since the reactivities of the ion-paired species at least, differ greatly. The methylmethacrylate ion-pair will, for instance, not add to styrene monomer, whereas the polystyryl ion-pair adds rapidly to methylmethacrylate [204]. This is a general phenomenon no reaction will occur if the ion-pair is on a monomer unit which has an appreciably higher electron affinity than that of the reacting monomer. The additions are thus extremely selective, more so than in radical copolymerization. There is no evidence that eqn. (26) holds and the approximate agreement with eqn. (25) results from other causes indicated below. [Pg.55]

An examination of reported reactivity ratios (Table 6) shows that the behaviour rj > 1, r2 1 or vice versa is a common feature of anionic copolymerization. Only in copolymerizations involving the monomers 1,1-diphenylethylene and stilbene, which cannot homopolymerize, do we find <1, r2 <1 [212—215], and hence the alternating tendency so characteristic of many free radical initiated copolymerizations. Normally one monomer is much more reactive to either type of active centre in the order acrylonitrile > methylmethacrylate > styrene > butadiene > isoprene. This is the order of electron affinities of the monomers as measured polarographically in polar solvents [216, 217]. In other words, the reactivity correlates well with the overall thermodynamic stability of the product. Variations of reactivity ratio occur with different solvents and counter-ions but the gross order is predictable. [Pg.56]

Homopolymerization of triphenylmethyl thiomethacrylate and its copolymerization with methylmethacrylate... [Pg.62]

Radical copolymerization of tetraphenylporphyrin monomers with the vinyl group in a benzene ring or pyrrole ring and their Cu(II), Co(II) and Zn(II) complexes with styrene or methylmethacrylate has been studied [47,48], Compared to the homopolymerization of styrene, the copolymerization decreases both the overall poljmierization rate and the molecular weight of the polymers formed. For example, the rate of chain transfer in the methylmethacrylate Co(II) porphyrin system is lO times greater than the homopolymerization of the methacrylate. [Pg.153]

Earner-Kowollik C, Quinn JF, Nguyen TLU, Heuts JPA, Davis TP. Kinetic investigations of reversible addition fragmentation chain transfer polymerizations cumyl phenyl-dithioacetate mediated homopolymerizations of styrene and methylmethacrylate. Macromolecules 2001 34 7849-7857. [Pg.361]


See other pages where Homopolymerizations methylmethacrylate is mentioned: [Pg.327]    [Pg.310]    [Pg.258]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.376]    [Pg.59]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.42 , Pg.53 , Pg.55 , Pg.66 ]




SEARCH



Homopolymerizations

© 2024 chempedia.info