Data are presented which show that polydimethylsiloxane oligomers with silanol ends condense in aqueous dispersion under mild conditions to form high polymers in the presence of sulfonic acid surfactants. The process follows a second-order rate law in silanol if reversibility is taken into account. The second-order rate constant is proportional to the area at the oil-water interface and is a complex function of surfactant concentration. The principal driving force is the heat of condensation of the water produced in the polymerization. A mechanism paralleling surface catalysis is offered in which a termolecular complex that consists of two surfactant molecules and one silanol end group reacts bimolecularly at the oil-water interface.
CITATION STYLE
Saam, J. C., & Huebner, D. J. (1982). CONDENSATION POLYMERIZATION OF OLIGOMERIC POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANOLS IN AQUEOUS EMULSION. Journal of Polymer Science. Part A-1, Polymer Chemistry, 20(12), 3351–3368. https://doi.org/10.1002/pol.1982.170201209
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