Polymerization of Vinyl Chloride at Ambient Temperature Using Macromolecular Design via the Interchange of Xanthate: Kinetic and Computational Studies
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Authors
Abreu, Carlos
Rezende, Talita C.
Fonseca, Ana C.
Guliashvili, Tamaz
Bergerbit, Cedric
D'Agosto, Franck
Yu, Li-Juan
Serra, Armenio
Coote, Michelle
Coelho, Jorge
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American Chemical Society
Abstract
Reversible deactivation radical polymerization of
vinyl chloride (VC) by methyl (ethoxycarbonothioyl)sulfanyl
acetate (MEA)-mediated macromolecular design via the interchange
of xanthate (MADIX) polymerization at ambient temperature is
reported. The polymerization system was studied using two
conventional radical initiators (having very distinct half-life times
at room temperature). The system was optimized regarding the
nature of the solvent, the monomer concentration, the polymerization temperature, and the target molecular weight. The kinetic
data showed linear first-order kinetics, the linear evolution of
molecular weights with conversion, and polymers with narrow molecular weight distributions (Đ ≈ 1.2 to 1.3) using a low
temperature (30−42 °C) and cyclopentyl methyl ether (CPME) as a “green” solvent. The resulting MEA-terminated poly(vinyl
chloride) (PVC) was fully characterized by 1
H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy that revealed the existence of a very
small fraction of structural defects and the presence of chain-end functional groups. “One-pot” chain extension (with VC) and
“one-pot” block copolymerizations (with vinyl acetate − VAc and N-vinylcaprolactam − NVCL) experiments confirmed the
“livingness” of the MEA-terminated PVC chains, giving access to different PVC-based block copolymers. Computational studies
confirm the results of the solvent screen and suggest that changes to the initial MADIX leaving or stabilizing groups could
improve control. The computational data were further confirmed using methyl 2-(4-methoxyphenoxycarbonothioylthio)acetate.
This work establishes a new green route to afford a wide range of new complex macrostructures including high-value materials
based on PVC segments.
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Macromolecules
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