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Photopolymerization kinetics

Polymers in Schemes 12 and 13 were the first examples of the preparation of pyridinium and iminopyridinium ylide polymers. One of the more recent contributions of Kondo and his colleagues [16] deals with the sensitization effect of l-ethoxycarbonyliminopyridinium ylide (IPYY) (Scheme 14) on the photopolymerization of vinyl monomers. Only acrylic monomers such as MMA and methyl acrylate (MA) were photoinitiated by IPYY, while vinylacetate (VA), acrylonitrile (AN), and styrene were unaffected by the initiator used. A free radical mechanism was confirmed by a kinetic study. The complex of IPYY and MMA was defined as an exciplex that served as a precursor of the initiating radical. This ylide is unique in being stabilized by the participation of a... [Pg.375]

Photopolymerization of MMA was also carried out in the presence of visible light (440 nm) using /3-PCPY as the photoinitiator at 30°C [20]. The initiator and monomer exponent values were calculated as 0.5 and 1.0, respectively, showing ideal kinetics. An average value of kp /kt was 4.07 x 10 L-mol -s . Kinetic data and ESR studies indicated that the overall polymerization takes place by a radical mechanism via triplet carbene formation, which acts as the sources of the initiating radical. [Pg.375]

Lyubimova, T Righetti, PG, On the Kinetics of Photopolymerization A Theoretical Study, Electrophoresis 14, 191, 1993. [Pg.615]

Figure 8. Kinetics of the photopolymerization of an epoxy diacrylate resin with and without UV absorber CO.5 % of Tinuvin 900)... Figure 8. Kinetics of the photopolymerization of an epoxy diacrylate resin with and without UV absorber CO.5 % of Tinuvin 900)...
Reaction Behavior and Kinetic Modeling Studies of Living Radical Photopolymerizations... [Pg.51]

In this work, the kinetics of these reactions are closely examined by monitoring photopolymerizations initiated by a two-component system consisting of a conventional photoinitiator, such as 2,2-dimethoxy-2-phenyl acetophenone (DMPA) and TED. By examining the polymerization kinetics in detail, further understanding of the complex initiation and termination reactions can be achieved. The monomers discussed in this manuscript are 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate (HEMA), which forms a linear polymer upon polymerization, and diethylene glycol dimethacrylate (DEGDMA), which forms a crosslinked network upon polymerization. [Pg.52]

The objective of the present work was to determine the influence of the light intensity on the polymerization kinetics and on the temperature profile of acrylate and vinyl ether monomers exposed to UV radiation as thin films, as well as the effect of the sample initial temperature on the polymerization rate and final degree of cure. For this purpose, a new method has been developed, based on real-time infrared (RTIR) spectroscopy 14, which permits to monitor in-situ the temperature of thin films undergoing high-speed photopolymerization, without introducing any additive in the UV-curable formulation 15. This technique proved particularly well suited to addressing the issue of thermal runaway which was recently considered to occur in laser-induced polymerization of divinyl ethers 13>16. [Pg.64]

The temperature reached by a monomer undergoing photopolymerization plays a key role on the reaction kinetics, in particular on the ultimate degree of conversion and therefore on the physico-chemical properties of the UV-cured polymer. It is strongly dependent on the formulation reactivity, the film thickness, as well as on the light intensity. [Pg.79]

To study the effects of composition on the photopolymerization behavior of acrylates, the group of Bowman et al. prepared gradient libraries where acrylate composition was varied in one dimension and light exposure was varied using a moveable shutter in the orthogonal direction [17-21]. An FTIR microscope was used to characterize the conversion across the samples and the data from multiple libraries was then used to derive kinetic models for the photopolymerization. [Pg.5]

Johnson PM, Stansbury JW, Bowman CN (2008) High-throughput kinetic analysis of acrylate and thiol-ene photopolymerization using temperature and exposure time gradients. J Polym Sci Part A Polym Chem 46 1502-1509... [Pg.13]

The general approach of graded radiation exposure can also be used to examine light driven processes such as photopolymerization [19]. For example, Lin-Gibson and coworkers used this library technique to examine structure-property relationships in photopolymerized dimethacrylate networks [38] and to screen the mechanical and biocompatibility performance of photopolymerized dental resins [39]. In another set of recent studies, Johnson and coworkers combined graded light exposure with temperature and composition gradients to map and model the photopolymerization kinetics of acrylates, thiolenes and a series of co-monomer systems [40 2]. [Pg.76]

Following route A (Fig. 1), Yan Xiao et al. reported the chemoenzymatic synthesis of poly(8-caprolactone) (PCL) and chiral poly(4-methyl-8-caprolactone) (PMCL) microparticles [5]. The telechelic polymer diol precursors were obtained by enzymatic polymerization of the corresponding monomers in the presence of hexanediol. Enzymatic kinetic resolution polymerization directly yielded the (R)-and (S )-enriched chiral polymers. After acrylation using acryloylchloride, the chiral and nonchiral particles were obtained by crosslinking in an oil-in-water emulsion photopolymerization. Preliminary degradation experiments showed that the stereoselectivity of CALB is retained in the degradation of the chiral microparticles (Fig. 2). [Pg.82]

In order to estimate kinetic constants for elementary processes in template polymerization two general approaches can be applied. The first is based on the generalized kinetic model for radical-initiated template polymerizations published by Tan and Alberda van Ekenstein. The second is based on the direct measurement of the polymerization rate in a non-stationary state by rotating sector procedure or by post-effect in photopolymerization. The first approach involves partial absorption of the monomer on the template. Polymerization proceeds according to zip mechanism (with propagation rate constant kp i) in the sequences filled with the monomer, and according to pick up mechanism (with rate constant kp n) at the sites in which monomer is outside the template and can be connected by the macroradical placed onto template. This mechanism can be illustrated by the following scheme ... [Pg.96]

Kinetics of Photoinitiated Reactions 4.3.1 Kinetics of Free Radical Photopolymerization... [Pg.70]

A comprehensive review of the kinetics of photopolymerization of multifunctional monomers was published by Andrzejewska. ... [Pg.73]

Condensed monolayer films of pure 6 polymerized rapidly, as did mixed 6/DSPE films of up to 75% DSPE, provided the monolayers were in the condensed state [33], In the liquid-expanded state, polymerization did not occur. In the condensed state, lateral diffusion of individual lipids within the monolayer is severely restricted compared to the liquid-like state. This precludes initiation of polymerization by diffusive encounter between excited-state and ground-state diacetylene lipids. In order for polymerization to occur in the condensed state, the film must be separated into domains consisting of either pure 6 or pure DSPE. A demonstration that the rates of photopolymerization for pure 6 and mixed 6/DSPE monolayers are equal would be a more stringent test for separate domains of the lipids, but no kinetic data have been reported for this system. [Pg.62]

Kinetics of Cationic Photopolymerization Chemical Systems in UV Processing... [Pg.8]

Most of the work reported so far on laser-induced photopolymerization deals with near UV and visible radiation ranging from blue (—400 nm) (3,12) to red light (—700 nm) (4). We present here a kinetic investigation on the... [Pg.207]

Moreover, it should be noticed that polymerization rates were determined from the maximum slope of the kinetic curves, namely at degrees of conversion between 20 and 40%. At that time, the large increase in viscosity of the photoresist may already have reduced the chain mobility, thus favoring radical isolation and first-order termination. It is therefore very likely that the intensity exponent of the photopolymerization rate equation will be less than 0.85 in the early stages and that it increases with conversion to reach almost unity in the solid network. Such a kinetic behavior was indeed observed for the photopolymerization of neat hexanedioldiacrylate (31). [Pg.221]

Photoinitiated free radical polymerization is a typical chain reaction. Oster and Nang (8) and Ledwith (9) have described the kinetics and the mechanisms for such photopolymerization reactions. The rate of polymerization depends on the intensity of incident light (/ ), the quantum yield for production of radicals ( ), the molar extinction coefficient of the initiator at the wavelength employed ( ), the initiator concentration [5], and the path length (/) of the light through the sample. Assuming the usual radical termination processes at steady state, the rate of photopolymerization is often approximated by... [Pg.457]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.221 , Pg.222 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.221 , Pg.222 ]




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Kinetics of Cationic Photopolymerization

Kinetics of Free Radical Photopolymerization

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Photopolymerization free radical kinetics

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Simplified Reaction Scheme and Kinetics of Photopolymerization

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