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Triphenylmethyl sodium polymerization

Another differential reaction is copolymerization. An equi-molar mixture of styrene and methyl methacrylate gives copolymers of different composition depending on the initiator. The radical chains started by benzoyl peroxide are 51 % polystyrene, the cationic chains from stannic chloride or boron trifluoride etherate are 100% polystyrene, and the anionic chains from sodium or potassium are more than 99 % polymethyl methacrylate.444 The radicals attack either monomer indiscriminately, the carbanions prefer methyl methacrylate and the carbonium ions prefer styrene. As can be seen from the data of Table XIV, the reactivity of a radical varies considerably with its structure, and it is worth considering whether this variability would be enough to make a radical derived from sodium or potassium give 99 % polymethyl methacrylate.446 If so, the alkali metal intitiated polymerization would not need to be a carbanionic chain reaction. However, the polymer initiated by triphenylmethyl sodium is also about 99% polymethyl methacrylate, whereas tert-butyl peroxide and >-chlorobenzoyl peroxide give 49 to 51 % styrene in the initial polymer.445... [Pg.244]

Although anionic polymerization of cyclic ethers is generally limited to oxiranes, there are reports of successful oxetane and tetrahydrofuran polymerizations in the presence of a Lewis acid. Aluminum porphyrin alone does not polymerize oxetane, but polymerization proceeds in the presence of a Lewis acid [Sugimoto and Inoue, 1999]. Similarly, THF is polymerized by sodium triphenylmethyl in the presence of a Lewis acid such as aluminum alkoxide [Kubisa and Penczek, 1999]. The Lewis acid complexes at the ether oxygen, which weakens (polarizes) the carbon-oxygen bond and enhances nucleophilic attack. [Pg.553]


See other pages where Triphenylmethyl sodium polymerization is mentioned: [Pg.224]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.178]    [Pg.383]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.626]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.214 ]




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