Emulsion polymerization of vinyl acetate using a polymerizable surfactant. I. Kinetic studies |
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Authors: | M. B. Urquiola V. L. Dimonie E. D. Sudol M. S. El-Aasser |
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Abstract: | ![]() A polymerizable surfactant, sodium dodecyl allyl sulfosuccinate (TREM LF-40; Henkel) and its nonpolymerizable counterpart were used in comparative studies of the emulsion polymerization of vinyl acetate. The conversion-time behavior differed for the two surfactants; the TREM LF-40 showed a decrease in the polymerization rate with increasing concentration while its hydrogenated derivative showed the opposite behavior, the rate increasing with increasing surfactant. Particle size analysis revealed a decreasing particle size with increasing surfactant concentration for both series of reactions. An explanation for the seemingly ambiguous results obtained for the polymerizable surfactant was sought by examining the reactivity of its vinyl group in copolymerization with vinyl acetate and its allylic group in a chain transfer reaction. The results suggest that both the copolymerization and chain transfer reactions can lead to the observed reduction in polymerization rate with increasing TREM LF-40 concentration. © 1992 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. |
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Keywords: | emulsion polymerization, vinyl acetate emulsion polymerization, polymerizable surfactant emulsion polymerization, kinetics |
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