Polymer Plymerisation Ion

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Chemical Engineering 160/260

Polymer Science and Engineering

Lecture 13:
Polymerization Techniques -
Dispersed Systems
Objectives

! To outline polymerization techniques and describe


approaches to reducing viscosity and improving thermal
control that involve dispersion of the monomer in water.
! To show how dispersed systems may be stabilized from
aggregation by modification of the hydrocarbon/water
interface.
Outline

! Polymerization Techniques
" Bulk
" Solution
" Suspension
" Emulsion
Bulk (Mass) Polymerization

General Description:
Monomer
Initiator

• Carried out to high conversion


• Free radical kinetics apply
• Used for ethylene, styrene, methyl
methacrylate

Advantages:
• Minimum contamination of product
Bulk (Mass) Polymerization
Disadvantages:
• Rt decreases at high conversion due to the Trommsdorf
effect, making the reaction hard to control.
• Rp and ν increase as conversion increases, broadening
the molecular weight distribution.
• Viscosity increases as conversion increases, making
heat removal and processing more difficult.
Process schemes: • Keep to low conversion;
separate and recycle unreacted
monomer
• Stagewise polymerization;
achieve low conversion in large
reactor, then prepare slabs or films
Solution Polymerization
General Description:
• Homogeneous, if polymer remains
soluble:
Monomer
vinyl acetate
Initiator
acrylonitrile,
Solvent
esters of acrylic acid

• Heterogeneous, if polymer is
insoluble, leading to precipitation
(powder or granular) polymerization:
acrylonitrile in water
vinyl chloride in bulk

• Free radical kinetics apply.


Solution Polymerization

Advantages:
• Solvent acts as a diluent and aids in removal of heat
of polymerization.
• Solvent reduces viscosity, making processing easier.
• Thermal control is easier than in the bulk.

Disadvantages:
• Chain transfer to solvent occurs, leading to low
molecular weights.
• Difficult to remove solvent from final form,
causing degradation of bulk properties.
• Environmental pollution due to solvent release.
Suspension (Bead or Pearl) Polymerization
• Droplets are
General Description: 0.001-1 cm in
Monomer diameter.
Inorganic Stabilizer
Oil-soluble Initiator
Water
• Kinetics
are the same
as in the bulk.

• Must have very low monomer


solubility in water or polymer
will form in aqueous phase.

• Used for styrene, methyl methacrylate, vinyl chloride, vinyl acetate


Suspension (Bead or Pearl) Polymerization
Advantages:
• Low viscosity due to the suspension
• Easy heat removal due to the high heat capacity
of water
• Polymerization yields finely divided, stable latexes
and dispersions to be used directly in coatings, paints,
and adhesives.
Disadvantages:
• Cannot be used for polymers whose glass transition
temperature is less than the polymerization temperature,
or else aggregation will occur.
• Must separate and purify polymer, or accept
contaminated product.
Emulsion Polymerization: Overview
General Description: • Surfactant is aggregated in
Monomer micelles.
Surfactant • Monomer is stabilized by
Water-soluble Initiator surfactant and dispersed in
Water water.
• Predominant process for
vinyl acetate, chloroprene,
butadiene/styrene/acrylonitrile
copolymers, various acrylates.
• Used somewhat for methyl
methacrylate, vinyl chloride,
vinylidene chloride, styrene.
Typical Emulsion Composition
Component Parts by weight

Styrene 25
Butadiene 75
Water 180
Emulsifier (surfactant 5
N-Dodecyl mercaptan 0.5
NaOH 0.061
Cumene hydroperoxide 0.17
FeSO4 0.017
Na4P2O7-10 H2O 1.5
Fructose 0.5
Data from G. Odian, Principles of Polymerization, 3rd Ed., 1991, p 336.
Emulsion Polymerization: Advantages
• Thermal and viscosity problems are minimized due to
the high heat capacity and ease of stirring of the continuous
aqueous phase.
• Molecular weight may be increased without decreasing
Rp:
0.4
Rp ~ [ I ] [ S] 0.6
Xn ~ [ I ]−0.6 [ S]0.6
• Recall that in normal free-radical polymerization Rp
and Xn are inversely related:

Rp ~ [ I ]0.5 Xn ~ [ I ]−0.5
• The latex may be used directly without purification.
Emulsion Components: Surfactant

Hydrocarbon

Water

• Surfactant (emulsifier) molecules have polar or ionic


head groups and hydrocarbon tails of 10-20 carbons;
dodecyl sulfate ions are typical.
• Surfactants aggregate at the hydrocarbon/water
interface and are in equilibrium with free surfactant.
Micelle Formation

• Above the critical micelle


concentration (CMC), there
is an equilibrium involving
clusters of surfactants, which
are typically spherical (20 to
100 Å in diameter) and which
contain 50 to 150 molecules.

• The hydrocarbon core of the


micelle will become swollen
by monomer molecules.
Emulsion Components: Monomer

• A small portion of water-insoluble or slightly


water-soluble monomer dissolves in solution.
• A larger monomer portion enters the interior of
micelles, causing them to increase in size.
• The largest portion is dispersed as surfactant-stabilized
monomer droplets having diameters greater than
10,000 Å; there are 1010 - 1011 monomer droplets/cm3.
Emulsion Components:
Site of Polymerization
• Radicals are produced in the aqueous phase at
approximately 1013 radicals/cm3sec.
• Polymerization in the aqueous phase is insignificant
due to the low monomer concentration.
• Polymerization mainly occurs in the micelle interiors due to:
• high monomer concentration
• high surface/volume ratio
• presence of interface for organic monomer and
water-soluble initiator
• During polymerization, monomer is replenished by diffusion
from droplets through the solution to micelles. Surfactant is
then redistributed, with more adsorbed on swollen polymer
particles and less on monomer droplets
Emulsion Components: Particles

• Three types of particles exist:


• monomer droplets
• inactive micelles (no polymerization occurring)
• active micelles (swollen polymer particles in
which polymerization is occurring)
Emulsion Polymerization Intervals
Interval I (0 - 10% conversion):
• Monomer in micelles (diameter ~ 100 Å)
• Monomer in droplets (diameter ~ 100,000 Å)
• Monomer in polymer particles
• Growing number of polymer particles
Interval II (10 - 50% conversion):
• No micellar surfactant
• Monomer in droplets
• Monomer in polymer particles
• Constant number of particles
Interval III (50 - 90% conversion):
• No monomer droplets
• Monomer in polymer particles
• Constant number of particles

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