Issue 14, 2016

A synthetic route to ultra-high molecular weight polystyrene (>106) with narrow molecular weight distribution by emulsifier-free, emulsion organotellurium-mediated living radical polymerization (emulsion TERP)

Abstract

We propose a route to synthesizing ultra-high molecular weight (>106) polystyrene (PS) having a narrow molecular weight distribution by controlled/living radical polymerization. The process is an emulsifier-free, emulsion organotellurium-mediated living radical polymerization (emulsion TERP) using poly(methacrylic acid)-methyltellanyl as a macro-chain transfer agent with a degenerative chain transfer (DT) mechanism. Under the polymerization conditions in which PS particles were formed by a self-assembly nucleation of polymerizing macro-chain transfer agents, very stable PS particles were successfully obtained. The segregation effect in the emulsion polymerization system can suppress the radical termination reaction, resulting in an ultra-high number-average molecular weight (Mn) PS in almost 24 h under 1 atm. The final Mn value was controlled by changing the initial monomer loading (solid contents of styrene), and then PS having a Mn ∼1.2 × 106 with a low polydispersity index (∼1.3) was successfully obtained.

Graphical abstract: A synthetic route to ultra-high molecular weight polystyrene (>106) with narrow molecular weight distribution by emulsifier-free, emulsion organotellurium-mediated living radical polymerization (emulsion TERP)

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
13 Feb 2016
Accepted
10 Mar 2016
First published
11 Mar 2016

Polym. Chem., 2016,7, 2573-2580

Author version available

A synthetic route to ultra-high molecular weight polystyrene (>106) with narrow molecular weight distribution by emulsifier-free, emulsion organotellurium-mediated living radical polymerization (emulsion TERP)

Y. Kitayama and M. Okubo, Polym. Chem., 2016, 7, 2573 DOI: 10.1039/C6PY00285D

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