Anionic Polymerization
Anionic Polymerization
Coupling agents:
Block Copolymerization
If the chain ends remain reactive when the monomer is consumed, one
could add more monomer and continue the reaction. Of course, one does
not have to add the same monomer again. Switching over to another
monomer leads to propagation of a new chain covalently bound to the
previous one (block copolymer dna eneryts rof elpmaxe gniwollof eht ni sa ,)
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Living polymerization is required for successful synthesis of block copolymers.
Block copolymers have important technological uses because they .often exhibit
hybrid rather than average properties
For example, if one block is hydrophilic but the other hydrophobic, the result is a
surfactant. In fact, the strongest known surfactants are made this way.
Commercial examples are the ABA triblock copolymers (where A = styrene and B =
1,4-butadiene, isoprene, or hydrogenated versions of these), thermoplastic elastomers
sold by Shell as "Kraton" and widely used as shoe sole material.
Other examples, although not made by anionic polymerization, are the Spandex fibers
(e.g., Lycra) which are actually multiblock copolymers with hard and soft segments.
Another application requires one or more blocks of flexible, low Tg polymer, with
other blocks of rigid, high Tg polymer.
The hard and soft blocks segregate in the solid state, and the polymer actually
exhibits two glass transitions, one at high temperature and a second one below room
temperature.
The resulting material behaves like a filled rubber, with the important distinction
that the hard domains can be melted at elevated temperature (above their Tg).
This means that, unlike conventional rubbers that are covalently crosslinked
(vulcanized), these block copolymers (known as thermoplastic elastomers) can be
processed thermally and molded.
The result is that the monomers get divided evenly among chains.