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Vinyl ethers, photoinitiator-free

In order for maleimide/vinyl ether photoinitiator free photopolymerization to be useful, it is important that the cured films have good thermal/UV stability. Since there are no small molecule photoinitiators added to the uncured mixture initially, there is no residual small molecule photo initiator present in the final crosslinked film. This accounts for the enhanced UV stability we have observed for cured maleimide/vinyl ether films. In addition, TGA thermograms of photocured films of the MPBM/CHVE mixture (Figure 8) exhibit excellent thermal stability, with decomposition occurring at higher temperatures than for a simple UV cured HDDA film with 3 weight percent DMAP photoinitiator. (Such thermal stability would be... [Pg.145]

Vinyl ethers can also be formulated with acryHc and unsaturated polyesters containing maleate or fumarate functionaHty. Because of their abiHty to form alternating copolymers by a free-radical polymeri2ation mechanism, such formulations can be cured using free-radical photoinitiators. With acryHc monomers and oligomers, a hybrid approach has been taken using both simultaneous cationic and free-radical initiation. A summary of these approaches can be found in Table 9. [Pg.519]

Thus, a mixture of simple carbonyls Me(CO)n and halides should behave as a photoinitiator of free radical polymerization. Many such systems have been found to function in this way. Complexes formed by irradiation of Fe(CO)5 in the presence of a vinyl monomer (M) (such as MMA, styrene, vinyl acetate, propylene, and vinyl ether) have been studied by Koerner Von Grustrof and colleagues [12,13] and shown to have the chemical struc-... [Pg.245]

Photoinitiator Free Polymerization of Maleimides and Vinyl Ethers... [Pg.133]

Difunctional vinvl ether/difunctional N-maleimide. Up until this point, our results have centered on the reactivity of monofunctional maleimide divinyl ether mixtures. From Kloosterboer s26 work for acrylate polymerization, it is known that the rate of polymerization of a free-radical process is increased dramatically as the functionality of the acrylate is increased. In order to enhance the polymerization rates of maleimide divinyl ether systems, it was decided to synthesize difimctional maleimides for copolymerization with difunctional vinyl ethers. The results in Table V indicate that the photoinitiated TTDBM [bismaleimide made from maleic anhydride and 4,7,10-... [Pg.142]

Free radical promoted, cationic polymerization also occurs upon irradiation of pyridinium salts in the presence of acylphosphine oxides. But phosphonyl radicals formed are not oxidized even by much stronger oxidants such as iodonium ions as was demonstrated by laser flash photolysis studies [51, 52]. The electron donor radical generating process involves either hydrogen abstraction or the addition of phosphorus centered or benzoyl radicals to vinyl ether monomers [53]. Typical reactions for the photoinitiated cationic polymerization of butyl vinyl ether by using acylphosphine oxide-pyridinium salt combination are shown in Scheme 10. [Pg.72]

Photopolymer systems are photocurable resins incorporating reactive liquid monomers, photoinitiators, chemical modihers and hhers. Typically stereolithography utilizes UV radiation, so UV-curable systems are used. Free-radical-photopolymerizable acrylate systems were originally used however, newer cationic epoxy-resin and vinyl ether systems (based on iodinium- or sulfonium-salt cationic initiators) are now being utilized. [Pg.421]

Coating compositions for this process can contain cyclic ethers, vinyl ether monomers, organosilicone monomers, and a wide variety of mono-, di-, and polyepoxy functional materials. Further modifications to this process include the addition of free radical polymerizable monomers in combination with the cationic polymerizable monomers so that both curing processes may take place at the same time. The photoinitiator systems that generate acid catalyst intermediates also generate free radical intermediates or can be combined with other photosensitizer materials such that both... [Pg.851]

A similar study has been performed on EPI blends in which the vinyl ether was replaced by an acrylate monomer (HDDA) to produce, by different mechanisms, two interpenetrating polymer networks. With the onium salt as sole photoinitiator, the cationic polymerization of the EPI epoxy groups occurred as fast in the formulation containing 20% of HDDA by weight as in the EPI/DVE-3 blend, to reach nearly 100% conversion within 0.6 s (Fig. 11). The polymerization quantum yield was found to be similar to that measured in the EPI/vinyl ether blend Op 650 mol E. By contrast, the acrylate double bonds were found to polymerize at a much slower pace, most probably because of the low reactivity of the free radicals generated by the cationic-type photoinitiator. [Pg.297]

In systems 1-4 radical polymerization takes place. Decomposition of the photoinitiator (e.g., benzoin and its derivatives) leads to formation of free radicals which react with the carbon-carbon double bonds. In system 5 acidic reactive species are formed which react with cycloaliphatic epoxy compounds and vinyl ethers to form a cross-linked network. Sulfonium, and iodonium salts are used to initiate this cationic polymerization, a typical example is PhjS PFg. ... [Pg.135]

The virtues of photoinitiated cationic polymerization are rapid polymerization without oxygen inhibition, minimal sensitivity to water, and the ability to polymerize vinyl ethers, oxiranes (epoxides), and other heterocyclic monomers (see Table 10.7) that do not polymerize by a free radical mechanism. [Pg.288]

The compositions of materials photocrosslinkable by cationic mechanism consist of mixtures of various vinyl ethers, or epoxides, or both. Difunctional cycloaliphatic epoxides have been used extensively in some UV curable systems, often as diluents for the various epoxy resins described in Chapter 6. Use of various divinyl ethers is also extensive. Because some cationic photoinitiators also generate free radicals, some compositions may contain mixtures of both types of materials, those that cure by cationic and those that cure by free-radical mechanisms. [Pg.448]


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Photoinitiation

Photoinitiator

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Vinyl ethers, photoinitiator-free polymerization

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