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Living Free Radical Polymerizations

Malmstrom, E.E. and Hawker, C.J. Macromolecular engineering via living free-radical polymerizations, Macromol. Chem. Phys., 199, 923, 1998. [Pg.215]

Living radical polymerizations have received considerable attention because they provide a convenient alternative for synthesizing block copolymers, polymers of narrow polydispersity and complex polymer structures (1-5). Because of their ability to initiate living free radical polymerizations, iniferters have been examined extensively after Otsu et al. (6) introduced them in 1982. In particular, dithiocarbamate derivatives have been studied more closely by several researchers. Lambrinos et al (7) have examined the molecular weight evolution during the polymerization of n-butyl acrylate using p-x ylylene bis(A,A-diethyl... [Pg.51]

From these experimental and modeling studies, the mechanism of the living free radical polymerizations initiated by a combination of TED and DMPA have been elucidated. The TED produces DTC radicals that preferentially cross-terminate with the propagating carbon radicals. By this cross-termination reaction, the carbon radical concentration is kept low (as was shown in figure 6) and the rate of polymerization is decreased, as is the autoacceleration effect. This suppression of the autoacceleration peak in HEM A polymerizations and, interestingly, in DEGDMA polymerization has been observed to increase as the TED concentrations are increased. This behavior has been predicted successfully by the model as well. [Pg.62]

Significant improvement in controlled polymerizations of a variety monomers, including styrene, acrylates, acrylamide, acrylonitrile, 1,3-dienes, and maleic anhydride has been achieved when alkoxyamines have been used as initiators for living, free radical polymerization.(696c, 697) Alkoxyamines can be easily synthesized in situ by the double addition of free radicals, generated by thermal decomposition of an azo-initiator, such as 2,2 -azo-h/.s-/.so-butyronitrile (AIBN), to nitrones (Scheme 2.206). [Pg.295]

Free-radical polymerizations, 70 273, 280 20 375-376. See also Living free-radical polymerization (LFRP) of ABS, 7 419... [Pg.381]

He also prepared a poly(styrene-g-styrene) polymer by this technique [114], The lack of crosslinking in these systems is indeed proof of the control achieved with this technique. An eight-arm star polystyrene has also been prepared starting from a calixarene derivative under ATRP conditions [115]. On the other hand, Sawamoto and his coworkers used multifunctional chloroacetate initiator sites and mediation with Ru2+ complexes for the living free-radical polymerization of star poly(methylmethacrylate) [116,117]. More recent work by Hedrick et al. [84] has demonstrated major progress in the use of dendritic initiators [98] in combination with ATRP and other methodologies to produce a variety of structure controlled, starlike poly(methylmethacrylate). [Pg.86]

Figure 7.7 Growth of ABA triblock hybrid by living free radical polymerization... Figure 7.7 Growth of ABA triblock hybrid by living free radical polymerization...
Living free-radical polymerization has recently attracted considerable attention since it enables the preparation of polymers with well-controlled composition and molecular architecture previously the exclusive domain of ionic polymerizations, using very robust conditions akin to those of a simple radical polymerization [77 - 86]. In one of the implementations, the grafting is achieved by employing the terminal nitroxide moieties of a monolith prepared in the presence of a stable free radical such as 2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-l-pyperidinyloxy (TEMPO). In this way, the monolith is prepared first and its dormant free-... [Pg.99]

Fig. 10. Dendritic initiator, 39, for living free radical polymerizations... Fig. 10. Dendritic initiator, 39, for living free radical polymerizations...
Hawker CJ, Barclay GG, Orellana A et al. (1996) Initiating systems for nitroxide-mediated living free radical polymerizations synthesis and evaluation. Macromolecules 29 5245-5254... [Pg.59]

Benoit D, Chaplinski V, Braslau R et al. (1999) Development of a universal alkoxyamine for living free radical polymerizations. J Am Chem Soc 121 3904-3920... [Pg.59]

Chiefari J, Chong YK, Ercole F (1998) Living free radical polymerization by reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer -the RAFT process. Macromolecules 31 5559-5562... [Pg.59]

Lohmeijer BGG, Schubert US (2004) Expanding the supramolecular polymer LEGO system nitroxide mediated living free radical polymerization for metallo-supramolecular block copolymers with a polystyrene block. J Polym Sci Part A Polym Chem 42 4016-4027... [Pg.62]

Husseman M, Malmstrom EE, McNamara M, Mate M, Mecerreyes D, Benoit DG, Hedrick JL, Mansky P, Huang E, RusseU TP, Hawker CJ (1999) Controlled synthesis of polymer brushes by Living free radical polymerization techniques. Macromolecules 32 1424-1431... [Pg.102]

Apart from ATRP, the concept of dual initiation was also applied to other (controlled) polymerization techniques. Nitroxide-mediated living free radical polymerization (LFRP) is one example reported by van As et al. and has the advantage that no further metal catalyst is required [43], Employing initiator NMP-1, a PCL macroinitiator was obtained and subsequent polymerization of styrene produced a block copolymer (Scheme 4). With this system, it was for the first time possible to successfully conduct a one-pot chemoenzymatic cascade polymerization from a mixture containing NMP-1, CL, and styrene. Since the activation temperature of NMP is around 100 °C, no radical polymerization will occur at the reaction temperature of the enzymatic ROP. The two reactions could thus be thermally separated by first carrying out the enzymatic polymerization at low temperature and then raising the temperature to around 100 °C to initiate the NMP. Moreover, it was shown that this approach is compatible with the stereoselective polymerization of 4-MeCL for the synthesis of chiral block copolymers. [Pg.91]

Because nitroxyl radicals do not react with most organic functional groups, they have found wide application as radical traps, and in living free radical polymerizations. Nitroxyl radicals are also used as spin labels, and are formed in spin trapping by nitroso compounds and nitrones vide infra). [Pg.8]

Scheme 1.33 Preparation of PS by nitroxide-mediated living free-radical polymerization and its utilization for the functionalization of shortened SWCNTs. Scheme 1.33 Preparation of PS by nitroxide-mediated living free-radical polymerization and its utilization for the functionalization of shortened SWCNTs.
Homopolymer PS and block copolymer poly(tert-butyl acrylate)-b-styrene, prepared by nitroxide-mediated living free-radical polymerization, were utilized for the functionalization of shortened SWCNTs through a radical coupling reaction (Scheme 1.33) [194]. [Pg.32]

Frechet and coworkers recently described how living free radical polymerization can be used to make dendrigrafts. Either 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine oxide (TEMPO) modified polymerization or atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) can be used [96] (see Scheme 10). The method requires two alternating steps. In each polymerization step a copolymer is formed that contains some benzyl chloride functionality introduced by copolymerization with a small amount of p-(4-chloromethylbenzyloxymethyl) styrene. This unit is transformed into a TEMPO derivative. The TEMPO derivative initiates the polymerization of the next generation monomer or comonomer mixture. Alternatively, the chloromethyl groups on the polymer initiate an ATRP polymerization in the presence of CulCl or CuICl-4,4T dipyridyl complex. This was shown to be the case for styrene and n-butylmethacrylate. SEC shows clearly the increase in molecu-... [Pg.204]


See other pages where Living Free Radical Polymerizations is mentioned: [Pg.519]    [Pg.661]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.42]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.174]    [Pg.204]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.90]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.127]    [Pg.131]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.39]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.138]    [Pg.213]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.85 , Pg.175 , Pg.178 ]




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Free living

Free radical vinyl polymerization living

Lived Free Radicals

Living Free Radical Polymerization of Styrene

Living controlled free radical polymerization

Living polymerization

Living radical

Living radical polymerization

Miniemulsion polymerization Living free radical

Nitroxide mediated living free radical polymerization

Nitroxides, living free-radical polymerization

Polymerization free radical

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