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1.
Geoffrey Johnston‐Hall Christopher Barner‐Kowollik Michael J. Monteiro 《Macromolecular theory and simulations》2008,17(9):460-469
The reversible addition‐fragmentation chain transfer chain length dependent termination (RAFT‐CLD‐T) technique allows a simple experimental approach to obtain chain‐length‐dependent termination rate coefficients as a function of conversion, k(x). This work provides a set of criteria by which accurate k(x) can be obtained using the RAFT‐CLD‐T method. Visualization of three‐dimensional plots varying all kinetic rate parameters and starting concentrations demonstrates that only certain combinations give an accurate extraction of k(x). The current study provides hands‐on guidelines for experimentalists applying the RAFT‐CLD‐T method.
2.
Supramolecular poly(vinyl acetate) PVAc 3‐arms stars were successfully generated by Reversible Addition–Fragmentation chain Transfer (RAFT)‐polymerized chains bearing hydrogen‐bonding heterocomplementary associating units. Chain Transfer Agents (CTA) bearing thymine‐ and diaminopyridine‐based units were first synthesized and proved to mediate efficiently the polymerization of VAc. The binding ability of the chains in solution was then demonstrated by 1H NMR and GPC measurements, proving the formation of the supramolecular stars.
3.
Kang Tao Dairen Lu Ruke Bai Hongfei Li Lijia An 《Macromolecular rapid communications》2008,29(17):1477-1483
We have developed a novel strategy for the preparation of ion‐bonded supramolecular star polymers by RAFT polymerization. An ion‐bonded star supramolecule with six functional groups was prepared from a triphenylene derivative containing tertiary amino groups and trithiocarbonate carboxylic acid, and used as the RAFT agent in polymerizations of tert‐butyl acrylate (tBA) and styrene (St). Molecular weights and structures of the polymers were characterized by 1H NMR and GPC. The results show that the polymerization possesses the character of living free‐radical polymerization and the ion‐bonded supramolecular star polymers PSt, PtBA, and PSt‐b‐PtBA, with six well‐defined arms, were successfully synthesized.
4.
Tomohiro Masukawa Akihiro Yokoyama Tsutomu Yokozawa 《Macromolecular rapid communications》2009,30(16):1413-1418
Well‐defined diblock copolymers composed of poly(N‐octylbenzamide) and polystyrene were synthesized by reversible addition‐fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization of styrene with a polyamide chain transfer agent (CTA) prepared via chain‐growth condensation polymerization. Synthesis of a dithioester‐type macro‐CTA possessing the polyamide segment as an activating group was unsatisfactory due to side reactions and incomplete introduction of the benzyl dithiocarbonyl unit. On the other hand, a dithiobenzoate‐CTA containing poly(N‐octylbenzamide) as a radical leaving group was easily synthesized, and the RAFT polymerization of styrene with this CTA afforded poly(N‐octylbenzamide)‐block‐polystyrene with controlled molecular weight and narrow polydispersity.
5.
Amilton Martins dos Santos Jordan Pohn Muriel Lansalot Franck D'Agosto 《Macromolecular rapid communications》2007,28(12):1325-1332
Hydrophilic (co)polymers carrying a thiocarbonyl thio end group such as poly(dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate), poly(ethylene oxide), and poly(ethylene oxide)‐block‐poly(dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate) have been evaluated as precursors of stabilizers in batch ab initio emulsion polymerization of styrene under acidic conditions to form electrosterically stabilized polystyrene latex particles. As a mixture of P(DMAEMA/H+Cl−)‐RAFT and PEO‐RAFT failed to give satisfactory results, PEO‐RAFT was used as a control agent for the RAFT polymerization of DMAEMA, and the resulting block copolymer was successfully used in ab initio styrene emulsion polymerization.
6.
Weipeng Lv Shuoqi Liu Xiaobin Fan Shulan Wang Guoliang Zhang Fengbao Zhang 《Macromolecular rapid communications》2010,31(5):454-458
A dextran‐based dual‐sensitive polymer is employed to endow gold nanoparticles with stability and pH‐ and temperature‐sensitivity. The dual‐sensitive polymer is prepared by RAFT polymerization of N‐isopropylacrylamide from trithiocarbonate groups linked to dextran and succinoylation of dextran after polymerization. The functionalized nanoparticles show excellent stability under various conditions and can be stored in powder‐form. UV and DLS measurements confirm that the temperature‐induced optical changes and aggregation behaviors of the particles are strongly dependent on pH.
7.
Martina H. Stenzel Ling Zhang Wilhelm T. S. Huck 《Macromolecular rapid communications》2006,27(14):1121-1126
Summary: Stimuli‐responsive glycopolymer brushes composed of N‐acryloyl glucosamine (AGA) and N‐isopropylacrylamide (NIPAAm) were prepared using RAFT polymerization. The RAFT agent was immobilized on the surface of a treated silicon waver via covalent attachment using the Z‐group. PAGA and PNIPAAm brushes showed a linear increase in brush thickness with the consumption of monomer in solution. The polymers generated in solution confirm the living behavior with the molecular weight increasing linearly with monomer conversion while the molecular weight distribution remains narrow. Additionally, the ability of PAGA brushes to grow further in the presence of NIPAAm reveals the presence of an active RAFT end group indicative of a living system. PAGA and PNIPAAm homopolymer brushes up to 30 nm were grown using this technique. PAGA brushes were utilized for further chain extension to generate stimuli‐responsive brushes with block structures of PAGA and PNIPAAm. The PAGA‐block‐PNIPAAm brushes were found to grow in size with the consumption of NIPAAm. Contact angle measurements confirm the suggested mechanism showing that the second monomer is incorporated between the first layer and the silicon surface as expected using the Z‐group approach.
8.
Ling Zhong Yongfeng Zhou Deyue Yan Caiyuan Pan 《Macromolecular rapid communications》2008,29(16):1385-1391
A new dendritic heteroarm star copolymer that contains multi‐alternating arms of poly(ethylene oxide‐tetrahydrofuran) (P(EO‐THF)) and poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) on a dendritic polyester core has been synthesized by a ‘core‐first’ approach by combination of sequential cationic ring‐opening polymerization (CROP) and reversible addition–fragmentation transfer (RAFT) polymerization initiated by a dendritic macroinitiator ( 3 ) capped with multi‐alternating terminal carboxylic acid groups (used directly to initiate the ROP of THF in the presence of EO as a polymerization promoter to attain P(EO‐THF) arms) and dithiobenzoate groups (used to initiate RAFT polymerization of MMA to attain PMMA arms). The structures of the products were confirmed by NMR spectroscopy, GPC‐MALLS, and DSC measurements.
9.
Kuo Han Wei Su Mincheng Zhong Qing Yan Yanhua Luo Qijin Zhang Yinmei Li 《Macromolecular rapid communications》2008,29(23):1866-1870
Poly(N‐isopropylacrylamide)‐block‐poly{6‐[4‐(4‐pyridyazo)phenoxy] hexylmethacrylate} (PNIPAM‐b‐PAzPy) was synthesized by successive reversible addition‐fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization. In a water/tetrahydrofuran (H2O/THF) mixture, amphiphilic PNIPAM‐b‐PAzPy self‐assembles into giant micro‐vesicles. Upon alternate ultraviolet (UV) and visible light irradiation, obvious reversible swelling‐shrinking of the vesicles was observed directly under an optical microscope. The maximum percentage increase in volume, caused by the UV light, reached 17%. Moreover, the swelling could be adjusted using the UV light power density. The derivation of this effect is due to photoinduced reversible isomerization of azopyridine units in the vesicles.
10.
Maria Celeste R. Tria Rigoberto C. Advincula 《Macromolecular rapid communications》2011,32(13):966-971
A new, simple, and effective method for preparing binary patterned brushes by electrodeposition and self‐assembly is presented. The technique involves the use of electrochemistry to immobilize a chain transfer agent (CTA) on a patterned conducting substrate that mediate surface‐initiated polymerization (SIP) through a reversible addition–fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) process. The non‐electropatterned surfaces were then backfilled with self‐assembly of an atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) silane initiator where the polymerization of the next brush was initiated. The use of techniques such as RAFT and ATRP is well known to give a controlled polymerization mechanism, which would be of great advantage in generating binary patterned brushes. FT‐IR imaging was used to analyze these films.
11.
Gabriel Jaramillo‐Soto M. Luz Castellanos‐Crdenas Pedro R. García‐Morn Eduardo Vivaldo‐Lima Gabriel Luna‐Brcenas Alexander Penlidis 《Macromolecular theory and simulations》2008,17(6):280-289
The RAFT radical polymerization of vinyl monomers in supercritical carbon dioxide was modeled using the Predici® simulation package. The sensitivity of polymerization responses on formulation and process variables was analyzed. The simulations were carried out using kinetic and physical parameters corresponding to the polymerization of methyl methacrylate in supercritical carbon dioxide, using AIBN as initiator, at 65 °C and 200 bar, and using values of the addition and fragmentation kinetic rate constants of a “typical” RAFT agent, as reference conditions. This is the first report in the literature addressing the modeling or simulation of RAFT polymerization in supercritical carbon dioxide.
12.
Highly efficient and well‐controlled ambient temperature reversible addition–fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization is readily carried out under environmentally friendly mild solar radiation. This discovery has significantly extended studies from man‐made separated‐spectroscopic‐emission UV‐vis radiation (Macromolecules 2006 , 39, 3770) to natural continuous‐spectroscopic‐emission solar radiation for ambient temperature RAFT polymerization.
13.
Gaojian Chen Xiulin Zhu Jian Zhu Zhenping Cheng 《Macromolecular rapid communications》2004,25(7):818-824
Summary: Plasma‐initiated controlled/living radical polymerization of methyl methacrylate (MMA) was carried out in the presence of 2‐cyanoprop‐2‐yl 1‐dithionaphthalate. Well‐defined poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), with a narrow polydispersity, could be synthesized. The polymerization is proposed to occur via a RAFT mechanism. Chain‐extension reactions were also successfully carried out to obtain higher molecular weight PMMA and PMMA‐block‐PSt copolymer.
14.
Peter J. Roth Cyrille Boyer Andrew B. Lowe Thomas P. Davis 《Macromolecular rapid communications》2011,32(15):1123-1143
Reversible addition fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization is one of the most extensively studied reversible deactivation radical polymerization methods for the production of well‐defined polymers. After polymerization, the RAFT agent end‐group can easily be converted into a thiol, opening manifold opportunities for thiol modification reactions. This review is focused both on the introduction of functional end‐groups using well‐established methods, such as thiol‐ene chemistry, as well as on creating bio‐cleavable disulfide linkages via disulfide exchange reactions. We demonstrate that thiol modification is a highly attractive and efficient chemistry for modifying RAFT polymers.
15.
Summary: We propose and demonstrate the utility of an interfacial living/controlled (reversible addition fragmentation chain transfer, RAFT) radical miniemulsion polymerization in nano‐encapsulation. The principles and methodology behind this technique are readily scalable and highly efficient. The living/controlled nature of the system offers great opportunities to tune the properties of the polymer shell‐like thickness, surface functionality, molecular weight, and inner‐wall functionality by simply using a semi‐continuous polymerization technique.
16.
Summary: We have developed a new strategy to prepare multiblock polymers and copolymers via one‐ or two‐step polymerization using a polymerizable cyclic trithiocarbonate (CTTC), 4,7‐diphenyl‐[1,3]dithiepane‐2‐thione. CTTC undergoes ring‐opening process to incorporate a trithiocarbonate moiety. The trithiocarbonate moiety in turn, functions as a reversible addition fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) agent. Through this mechanism, multiblock polystyrenes and polystyrene‐block‐ poly(butyl acrylate) copolymers containing various narrow polydispersity blocks can be prepared.
17.
Nawel Khelfallah Nikhil Gunari Karl Fischer Giorgos Gkogkas Nikos Hadjichristidis Manfred Schmidt 《Macromolecular rapid communications》2005,26(21):1693-1697
Summary: Amphiphilic cylindrical brush‐coil block copolymers consisting of a polystyrene coil and a cylindrical brush block with poly(acrylic acid) side chains are prepared by ATRP of t‐butylacrylate from a block comacroinitiator. Upon acidolysis of the poly(t‐butylacrylate), water‐soluble polymers were obtained that were observed to form micelles consisting of 4–5 block copolymers on average in aqueous solution. The star‐like nature of such micelles was clearly visualized by scanning force microscopy.
18.
Weidong Zhang Wei Zhang Zhengbiao Zhang Jian Zhu Xiulin Zhu 《Macromolecular rapid communications》2010,31(15):1354-1358
A clickable alkyne monomer, PgMA, was successfully polymerized in a well‐controlled manner via single electron transfer initiation and propagation through the radical addition fragmentation chain transfer (SET‐RAFT) method. The living nature of the polymerization was confirmed by the first‐order kinetic plots, the linear relationships between molecular weights and the monomer conversions while keeping relatively narrow (≤1.55), and the successful chain‐extension with MMA. The better controllability of SET‐RAFT than other CRP methods is attributed to the less competitive termination in view of the presence of the CTA as well as the Cu(II) that is generated in situ. Moreover, a one‐pot/one‐step technique combining SET‐RAFT and “click chemistry” methods has been successfully employed to prepare the side‐chain functionalized polymers.
19.
Toshihiko Arita Michael Buback Olaf Janssen Philipp Vana 《Macromolecular rapid communications》2004,25(15):1376-1381
Summary: Application of high pressure, up to 2 500 bar, in cumyl dithiobenzoate‐mediated styrene reversible addition fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerizations was found to be extremely advantageous with respect to both rate and control of polymerization. The overall rate of polymerization could be increased by a factor of approximately 3 with, e.g., at 23% conversion, concomitantly reducing the polydispersity indices from 1.35 to 1.10. No significant effect of increased pressure on the rate retardation effect was found.
20.
Summary: Amphiphilic graft polyphosphazenes (EtTrp/PNIPAm‐PPP) with different mole ratios of hydrophobic groups to hydrophilic segments were synthesized by ring‐opening polymerization and subsequent substitution reactions. The self‐assembly behavior of these graft copolymers was studied in detail by TEM, SEM, CLSM, and AFM. Depending on the copolymer composition and common organic solvent employed in dialysis process, supramolecular aggregates ranging from network, nanospheres, high‐genus particles to macrophage‐like aggregates were produced with graft copolymers.