Termination kinetics of surface-initiated radical polymerization measured by time-resolved ESR spectroscopy after laser-pulse initiation

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Abstract

The single-pulse-pulsed-laser polymerization-electron spin resonance (SP-PLP-ESR) method was used to study the termination reaction in polymerization of n-butyl methacrylate (n-BMA) from silica nanoparticles. The polymerization from the surface was initiated by the surface-attached photoinitiator 2,2-dimethoxy-2-phenyl-1-(2-(2-(trimethoxysilyl)ethyl)phenyl)ethane-1-one (DMPTS). The obtained termination rate coefficient at 335 K of k t = (5.4 ± 0.7) × 10 6 L mol -1 s -1, which could unambiguously be assigned to the termination reaction between two surface-attached macroradicals, is about 2 orders of magnitude smaller than the value found in homogeneous n-BMA polymerization. Surprisingly, no chain-length dependence of the termination rate coefficient could be observed. This fact and temperature-dependent studies of k t, which yield an activation energy that is in perfect agreement with the activation energy of propagation of n-BMA, indicate that the termination between surface-attached macroradicals proceeds under reaction diffusion control, as their translational diffusion is suppressed.

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Moehrke, J., & Vana, P. (2015). Termination kinetics of surface-initiated radical polymerization measured by time-resolved ESR spectroscopy after laser-pulse initiation. Macromolecules, 48(10), 3190–3196. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.macromol.5b00662

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