Title: CH3A4, Polymer Chemistry20022003
1CH3A4, Polymer Chemistry 2002/2003
- www.warwick.ac.uk/polymers
2CH3A4, Polymer Chemistry 2002/2003
- Copolymers
- Ionic Polymerisation
- Statistical Copolymers
3CH3A4, Polymer Chemistry Dave Haddleton 2002/2003
Lecture 1 Introduction
Discussion of polymers in everyday use
structure/property correlation
Brief description of copolymers statistical,
block, graft copolymers
4Books Principles of
Polymerisation
G Odian Polymer Synthesis
P
Rempp and E W Merrill Polymers Chemistry
Physics of Modern Materials J M G Cowie
Polymer Chemistry An Introduction
G Challa Introduction to
Polymers R J Young and P A Lovell
5Need to Know from Year 2
- Viscosity equations
- Mark-Houwink equation
- Scheme for Free radical Polymerisation
6- Plastics
- Paint
- Adhesives
- Fibres/Fabrics
- Tyres
- Mobile phones
- Shampoo
- Cosmetics
- Optics
- CD,s
7Copolymers
- Statistical
- Block
- Graft
- Alternating
- Terpolymers
8When the two monomers are arranged in an
alternating fashion, the polymer is called, of
course, an alternating copolymer
-A-B-A-B-A-B-A-B-A-B-
In a random copolymer, the two monomers
may follow in any order
-A-A-B-A-B-B-B-A-B-A-A-B-
In a block
copolymer, all of one type of monomer are
grouped together, and all of the other are
grouped together. A block copolymer can be
thought of as two homopolymers joined together
at the ends A-A-A-A-A-A-A-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-
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10Lecture 2 Revision of polymers in
solution viscosity equations, Mark-Houwink
equations Polymers in the solid
state, Tg and Tm, physical meaning of Tg
Tg of copolymers, calculation of Tg
with respect to polymer composition
Revision of free radical homopolymerisation
11Polymers in Solution
- When we add a polymer to a solvent
- A) Polymer swells to a gel
- B) Dissolves to a viscous solution
- Usually into a random coil or sometimes more rod
like
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15Polymers in the solid state
- Crystalline
- Glassy
- Not all polymers can crystallise
- None are 100 crystalline
- (look at USM web page for movie)
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25Copolymerisation
- If we have 50 mol MMA and 50 mol Styrene and
leave the reaction to 50 conversion. - What is the composition of the polymer?
- What is the composition of the monomer?
- What is the Tg of the polymer produced?
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29Statistical Copolymerization
- RM1? M1 ? RM1M1?
- Rate k11RM1?M1
- RM1? M2 ? RM1M2?
- Rate k12RM1?M2
- RM2? M1 ? RM2M1?
- Rate k21RM2?M1
- RM2? M2 ? RM2M2?
- Rate k22RM2?M2
30The rate of monomer disappearance is given
by -dM1/dt k11M1M1
k21M2M1 -dM2/dt k12M1M2
k22M2M2 Steady state approximation k12M1
M2 k21M2M1 M1/ M2 k21M1
k12M2
31The relative rates of comonomer incorporation
then reads dM1/dM2 k11M1M1
k21M2M1 k12M1M2
k22M2M2 divide both by M2 and
rearrange dM1/dM2 M1 k11/ k12 M1
M2 M2 k22/ k21 M2 M1
32- Reactivity ratios
- r1 k11 k12
- r2 k22 k21
33Statistical Copolymerization
- r1 characterizes the reactivity of the 1 radical
with respect to the two monomers 1 and 2 - If r1 gt 1 then homopolymerization growth is
preferred - If r1 0 then only reaction with 2 will occur
34Statistical Copolymerization
- Fa is the amount of monomer A in the POLYMER
- fa is the amount of monomer A in the monomer feed
- Fa Fb 1 fa fb 1
35Mole fraction of monomer A in feed fa
M1/M1 M2
36- Reactivity ratios
- r1 k11 k12
- r2 k22 k21
37Copolymer equation
- Incorporate reactivity ratios and use mole
fractions - F1 r1f12 f1f2
- r1f12 r2f22 2f1f2
Reactivity ratios are monomer pair dependant I.e.
they are always the same for each monomer pair
38Assumptions
- Long Chain assumption i.e. initiation and
termination reactions can be ignored in the
calculation of copolymer composition - Equal reactivity i.e rate is independent of chain
size - Reactivity ratios are independent of dilution
- Reactivity ratios are independent of rate and
conversion
39Assumptions continued
- Reactivity ratios are independent of inhibitors,
retarder CTAs and solvents
40We now need to look at the effect of
the reactivity ratios on the copolymerisation proc
ess. We plot the composition of the polymer as a
function of the composition of the monomer feed.
41Ideal Copolymerization
- ra rb 1
- A and B exhibit the same relative reactivity
towards B - equation becomes
- Fa rafa
- rafa fb
42Ideal Copolymerization
- Plot is around the diagonal
43Alternating copolymer
44Ideal copolymer
45Alternating Copolymer
46Rich in one monomer
47Quite typical copolymerisation
48Determination of reactivity ratios
- Copolymerise at different monomer feed ratios
- Obtain Fa vs fa data (E.g. 0.2, 0.4, 0.6)
- Interpret data by a lineraization method
- Kelen-Tudos
- Fineman-Ross
49Linearization method
- Fineman Ross
- (see transparency)
- ra and rb not treated symmetrically
- Kelen-Tudos method probably most common
50Factors that affect copolymer reactivites
- Steric Factors
- Resonance stabilization of radical
- Polarity of the double bond
51Qe scheme
- Attempt to predict the reactivity of a monomer
towards a radical - Use resonance and polarization parameters
- Similar to Hammett plots
- Rather Qualitiative
52Penultimate effects
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55Living/Ionic Polymerisation
- Anionic Polymerisation
- Cationic Polymerisation
- Ring Opening Polymerisation
- Living Radical Polymerisation
- Group transfer Polymerisation
56Living Polymerisation
- Method to prepare polymers with predetermined Mn
- DP Monomer/Initiator
- Narrow PDi (lt1.20)
- Controlled functionality
- Block copolymers by various strategies
- No termination
- No Chain Transfer
57Anionic Polymerisation
- More selective than radical polymerisation
- Need electron withdrawing group attached to vinyl
group - e.g. -CO2R, -CN, -Ph, -vinyl
- Invented in 1956 by Swarzc (Nobel Prize)
- Industrial use limited
- Blocks, stars, grafts
- Usually an organometallic initiator
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59Anionic Polymerisation of Styrene
60Anionic Polymerisation of dienes
61Aggregation of Butyl Lithium
62Ion-Pair formation
63Solvents
- Aprotic to prevent transfer to solvent and
termination - Free of electrophilic impurities which will react
with ionic sites - Dissolve both monomer and polymer allowing
heterogeneous polymerisation
64Solvents can vary in polarity
- e.g.
- alkanes
- cyclohexane
- benzene
- toluene
- thf, dimethoxyethane
65Additives can be used to increase polarity
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67Anionic Polymerisation of Acrylics
E.g.
Initiation
68Anionic Polymerisation of MMA
Propagating end is an enol
69Problems with Propagation
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75Calculate Mn for Psty with BuLi
76Calculate PDi
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78Propagation
- Dependant on ion-pair
- Anion
- Cation (or Gegen-ion)
- Solvent polarity
79Effect of solvent polarity on stereochemistry
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81Termination
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83Termination with protic impurities
84Termination to functioanl polymers
85Block copolymers
- Sequential Monomer Addition
- Multi-functional Initiators
86Calculate Mn for Block Copolymer
87GTP
88Group Transfer Polymerisation
- Polar Solvent
- eg thf, glymes
- (Will not work in non polar solvents eg toluene,
MWD is 2) - Catalysts
- Nucleophiles
- eg F-, HF2-, AcO-, CN-
- Gegen-ions
- large eg Bu4N, Et4N
89Mechanism of GTP
90GTP Associative Mechanism
91GTP Irreversible Dissociative Mechanism
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95Cationic Polymerisation
- Over 20 yrs old
- Industrial use in butyl rubber manafacture
- Copolymer of
- Active sites are carbenium or oxonium
Need electron donating groups to stabilise the
cation
96Cationic polymerisation
- Usually reactive enough to make polymers at very
low temperatures - However, inherently unstable, side reactions
-
- in particular ?-proton elimination from active end
97Monomers for Cationic Polymerisation
98Cationic polymerisation
- Usually no real molecular weight control
- Living cationic polymerisation would yield
controlled polymer geometries not available from
other methods.
99Cationic Initiation
Protonic acids with bulky anions e.g. H2SO4,
HClO4, FSO3H, etc, etc
Lewis Acids e.g SnCl4, AlCl3, BF3 when reacted
with a nucleophile
100Cationic Propagation
101Termination in Cationic Polymerisation
See http//www.psrc.usm.edu/macrog/index.htm
102Living cationic polymerisation
- 1980's Sawamoto and Higahimura theorised that if
the charge on the cation could be decreased by a
specific nucleophilic interaction it may be
stabilised towards ?-proton elimination. - 1984 1st example of living cationic polymerisation
103Living cationic polymerisation
- using HI/I2
- shortly afterwards HI/ZnX2 X I, Br, Cl
- Mn ? M/I
- Block copolymer by sequential addition
- Mn increases linearly with conversion
104Ring Opening Metathesis
Metathesis of alkenes
105Ring Opening Metathesis
106Ring Opening Metathesis
107Ring Opening MetathesisCatalysts
- Normally made in-situ
- WCl6/AlEt3
- MoCl5/AlEt3
108Ring Opening Metathesis
109Living ROMP
Good ROMP catalyst W or Mo Bulky ligands M-O and
MN ligands
110Living ROMP
- Metal needs to be in high oxidation state
- 4-coordinate alkylidene with bulky ligands
- this allows small substrates to attack
- change alkoxide to (CF3)2MeC.O increase turnover
for pentene from 2 to 1000 turnovers per minute
111Commercial use of ROMP
- Poly(norbornene)
- MoO3/alumina
- production for 20 years
- PDCP
- Reaction injection moulding
- 2 reactant streams
- high density of crosslinks
112ROMP in water
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114Overview of course
- Radical Copolymerization
- Living Polymerization
- Anionic Polymerization
- Cationic Polymerization
- ROMP
115Control of Polymer Structure
- Block copolymers
- Telechelic polymers
- Graft copolymers
- Star copolymers
- Narrow PDi polymers
116When the two monomers are arranged in an
alternating fashion, the polymer is called, of
course, an alternating copolymer
-A-B-A-B-A-B-A-B-A-B-
In a random copolymer, the two monomers
may follow in any order
-A-A-B-A-B-B-B-A-B-A-A-B-
In a block
copolymer, all of one type of monomer are
grouped together, and all of the other are
grouped together. A block copolymer can be
thought of as two homopolymers joined together
at the ends A-A-A-A-A-A-A-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-B-
117Equations
- Instantaneous copolymer equation
- Fa vs fa plots
- Mn in living polymerisation
- PDi in living polymerisation
- Mn for block copolymers
- Molecular weight equations
- Viscosity equations
- Tg for copolymers
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119Copolymer equation
- Incorporate reactivity ratios and use mole
fractions - F1 r1f12 f1f2
- r1f12 r2f22 2f1f2
Reactivity ratios are monomer pair dependant I.e.
they are always the same for each monomer pair
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122Characterisation methods
- GPC
- NMR
- FTIR
- DSC
- MALDI MS
- Gravimetry