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1.
The thermal decomposition rate constant (kd ) of 2,2′‐azoisobutyronitrile in acrylonitrile (AN; monomer A)–methyl methacrylate (MM; monomer B) comonomer mixtures in N,N‐dimethylformamide (DMF) as a function of the comonomer mixture composition and its concentration in the solvent at 60 °C was studied. The dependences kd = f(xA ,C) [xA (mole fraction of A in the comonomer mixture) = A/(A + B) = A/C, where C is the comonomer mixture concentration] have a different course as a function of C: from a curve kd = f(xA ) approaching the straight line (C = 2 mol · dm−3) to a convex curve possessing a maximum at a point xA = 0.7 (C = 4 mol · dm−3) to a curve with a flattened wide maximum within the range of xA = 0.2–0.8 (C = 7 mol · dm−3) to a curve with the shape of a lying s (C = 9 mol · dm−3). All the courses of the experimental dependences kd = f(xA ,C) can be explained with a hypothesis of initiator solvation by the comonomers AN and MM and the solvent DMF. The existing solvated forms, their relative stability constants, the thermal decomposition rate constants, and the relative contents in the system were determined. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci A: Polym Chem 38: 2156–2166, 2000  相似文献   

2.
Polymerization of 2‐methacryloyloxyethyl phosphorylcholine (MPC) was kinetically investigated in ethanol using dimethyl 2,2′‐azobisisobutyrate (MAIB) as initiator. The overall activation energy of the homogeneous polymerization was calculated to be 71 kJ/mol. The polymerization rate (Rp) was expressed by Rp = k[MAIB]0.54±0.05 [MPC]1.8±0.1. The higher dependence of Rp on the monomer concentration comes from acceleration of propagation due to monomer aggregation and also from retardation of termination due to viscosity effect of the MPC monomer. Rate constants of propagation (kp) and termination (kt) of MPC were estimated by means of ESR to be kp = 180 L/mol · s and kt = 2.8 × 104 L/mol · s at 60 °C, respectively. Because of much slower termination, Rp of MPC in ethanol was found at 60 °C to be 8 times that of methyl methacrylate (MMA) in benzene, though the different solvents were used for MPC and MMA. Polymerization of MPC with MAIB in ethanol was accelerated by the presence of water and retarded by the presence of benzene or acetonitrile. Poly(MPC) showed a peculiar solubility behavior; although poly(MPC) was highly soluble in ethanol and in water, it was insoluble in aqueous ethanol of water content of 7.4–39.8 vol %. The radical copolymerization of MPC (M1) and styrene (St) (M2) in ethanol at 50 °C gave the following copolymerization parameters similar to those of the copolymerization of MMA and St; r1 = 0.39, r2 = 0.46, Q1 = 0.76, and e1 = +0.51. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci A: Polym Chem 38: 509–515, 2000  相似文献   

3.
3‐Methyl‐3‐(3‐pentyl)‐1,2‐dioxetane 1 and 3‐methyl‐3‐(2,2‐dimethyl‐1‐propyl)‐1,2‐dioxetane 2 were synthesized in low yield by the α‐bromohydroperoxide method. The activation parameters were determined by the chemiluminescence method (for 1 ΔH‡ = 25.0 ± 0.3 kcal/mol, ΔS‡ = −1.0 entropy unit (e.u.), ΔG‡ = 25.3 kcal/mol, k1 (60°C) = 4.6 × 10−4s−1; for 2 ΔH‡ = 24.2 ± 0.2 kcal/mol, ΔS‡ = −2.0 e.u., ΔG‡ = 24.9 kcal/mol, k1 (60°C) = 9.2 × 10−4s−1. Thermolysis of 1–2 produced excited carbonyl fragments (direct production of high yields of triplets relative to excited singlets) (chemiexcitation yields for 1: ϕT = 0.02, ϕS ≤ 0.0005; for 2: ϕT = 0.02, ϕS ≤ 0.0004). The results are discussed in relation to a diradical‐like mechanism. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Heteroatom Chem 12:176–179, 2001  相似文献   

4.
3‐Ethyl‐3‐methacryloyloxymethyloxetane (EMO) was easily polymerized by dimethyl 2,2′‐azobisisobutyrate (MAIB) as the radical initiator through the opening of the vinyl group. The initial polymerization rate (Rp) at 50 °C in benzene was given by Rp = k[MAIB]0.55 [EMO]1.2. The overall activation energy of the polymerization was estimated to be 87 kJ/mol. The number‐average molecular weight (M?n) of the resulting poly(EMO)s was in the range of 1–3.3 × 105. The polymerization system was found to involve electron spin resonance (ESR) observable propagating poly(EMO) radicals under practical polymerization conditions. ESR‐determined rate constants of propagation (kp) and termination (kt) at 60 °C are 120 and 2.41 × 105 L/mol s, respectively—much lower than those of the usual methacrylate esters such as methyl methacrylate and glycidyl methacrylate. The radical copolymerization of EMO (M1) with styrene (M2) at 60 °C gave the following copolymerization parameters: r1 = 0.53, r2 = 0.43, Q1 = 0.87, and e1 = +0.42. EMO was also observed to be polymerized by BF3OEt2 as the cationic initiator through the opening of the oxetane ring. The M?n of the resulting polymer was in the range of 650–3100. The cationic polymerization of radically formed poly(EMO) provided a crosslinked polymer showing distinguishably different thermal behaviors from those of the radical and cationic poly(EMO)s. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci A: Polym Chem 39: 1269–1279, 2001  相似文献   

5.
The polymerization of α‐N‐(α′‐methylbenzyl) β‐ethyl itaconamate derived from racemic α‐methylbenzylamine (RS‐MBEI) by initiation with dimethyl 2,2′‐azobisisobutyrate (MAIB) was studied in methanol kinetically and with ESR spectroscopy. The overall activation energy of polymerization was calculated to be 47 kJ/mol, a very low value. The polymerization rate (Rp ) at 60 °C was expressed by Rp = k[MAIB]0.5±0.05[RS‐MBEI]2.9±0.1. The rate constants of propagation (kp ) and termination (kt ) were determined by ESR. kp was very low, ranging from 0.3 to 0.8 L/mol s, and increased with the monomer concentration, whereas kt (4–17 × l04 L/mol s) decreased with the monomer concentration. Such behaviors of kp and kt were responsible for the high dependence of Rp on the monomer concentration. Rp depended considerably on the solvent used. S‐MBEI, derived from (S)‐α‐methylbenzylamine, showed somewhat lower homopolymerizability than RS‐MBEI. The kp value of RS‐MBEI at 60 °C in benzene was 1.5 times that of S‐MBEI. This was explicable in terms of the different molecular associations of RS‐MBEI and S‐MBEI, as analyzed by 1H NMR. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci A: Polym Chem 38: 4137–4146, 2000  相似文献   

6.
Rate constants for the reaction of 1-chloro-2,3-epoxypropane with p-cresol in the presence of basic catalysts were studied at the temperature range of 71–100°C. It was found that in the presence of sodium p-cresolate, three consecutive reactions proceeded giving the following products: 1-chloro-3-(tolyloxy)-2-propanol (CTP), 1-(p-tolyloxy)-2,3-epoxypropane (TEP) as a main product, and 1,3-di(p-tolyloxy)-2-propanol (DTP). Their rate constants at 71°C were: k1 = 0.030 ± 0.009, k2 = 1.58 ± 0.02, and k3 = 0.033 ± 0.005 dm3/mol · min, respectively. In the presence of quaternary ammonium salts, this process consisted of 5 reactions which led to CTP as a main product as well as TEP and 1,3-dichloro-2-propanol (DCP). The rate constant of CTP formation at 71°C was established, k1 = 0.130 ± 0.030 dm3/mol · min, as were the ratios of the other rate constants k2/k−4 = 1.5 ± 0.2, k5/k−4 = 20.0 ± 5.0, and k4/k1 = 0.6 ± 0.7. Based on the changes in Cl ion concentration during the reaction, the catalystic activity of quaternary ammonium salts was explained. The kinetic model of these reactions in the presence of basic catalysts has been proposed and appropriate kinetic equations have been presented. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Int J Chem Kinet 29: 73–79, 1997.  相似文献   

7.
Polymerization of N‐(2‐phenylethoxycarbonyl)methacrylamide (PECMA) with dimethyl 2,2′‐azobisisobutyrate (MAIB) was investigated in tetrahydrofuran (THF) kinetically and by means of electron spin resonance (ESR). The overall activation energy of the polymerization was calculated to be 58 kJ/mol. The initial polymerization rate (Rp) is expressed by Rp = k[MAIB]0.3[PECMA]2.3 at 60 °C. Such unusual kinetics may be ascribable to primary radical termination and to acceleration of propagation due to monomer association. Propagating poly(PECMA) radical was observed as a 13‐line spectrum by ESR under practical polymerization conditions. ESR‐determined rate constants of propagation (kp, 4.7–10.5 L/mol s) and termination (kt, 4.6 × 104 L/ml s) at 60 °C are much lower than those of methacrylamide and methacrylate esters. The Arrhenius plots of kp and kt gave activation energies of propagation (24 kJ/mol) and termination (25 kJ/mol). The copolymerizations of PECMA with styrene (St) and acrylonitrile were examined at 60 °C in THF. Copolymerization parameters obtained for the PECMA (M1) − St(M2) system are as follows: r1 = 0.58, r2 = 0.60, Q1 = 0.73, and e1 = +0.22. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci A: Polym Chem 38: 4264–4271, 2000  相似文献   

8.
N-(Butyl-3-one)imidazole acts as an initiating adduct which is formed in the anionic polymerization of methyl vinyl ketone (MVK) induced by imidazole (Im) and is directly formed from Im and the MVK monomer. The kinetics of the anionic homopolymerization of MVK and acrylamide (AAm) under argon in the presence of the adduct were investigated in tetrahydrofuran (THF). The rate of polymerization for the MVK system is expressed as Rp = k[Adduct] [MVK], where k = 3.1 × 10?6 L/(mol·s)in THF at 30°C. The overall activation energy, Ea , was found to be 5.34 kcal/mol. The Rp for the AAm system is expressed as Rp = k[Adduct] [AAm], where k = 6.8 × 10?6 L/(mol·s) in THF at 30°C, with Ea 7.78 kcal/mol. The mechanism of the polymerization induced by the initiator adduct is discussed on the basis of these results.  相似文献   

9.
A full kinetic scheme for the free‐radical reversible addition–fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) process is presented and implemented into the program package PREDICI®. With the cumyl dithiobenzoate‐mediated bulk polymerization of styrene at 60 °C as an example, the rate coefficients associated with the addition–fragmentation equilibrium are deduced by the careful modeling of the time‐dependent evolution of experimental molecular weight distributions. The rate coefficient for the addition reaction of a free macroradical to a polymeric RAFT species (kβ) is approximately 5 · 105 L mol?1 s?1, whereas the fragmentation rate coefficient of the formed macroradical RAFT species is close to 3 · 10?2 s?1. These values give an equilibrium constant of K = kβ/k = 1.6 · 107 L mol?1. Conclusive evidence is given that the equilibrium lies well on the side of the macroradical RAFT species. The high value of kβ is comparable in size to the propagation rate coefficients reported for acrylates. The transfer rate coefficient to cumyl dithiobenzoate is close to 3.5 · 105 L mol?1 s?1. A careful sensitivity analysis was performed, which indicated that the reported rate coefficients are accurate to a factor of 2. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci A: Polym Chem 39: 1353–1365, 2001  相似文献   

10.
The methyl acrylate dimer (MAD) is a sterically hindered macromonomer, and the propagating radical can fragment to an unsaturated end group. The propagation‐rate coefficient (kp) for MAD was obtained by pulsed‐laser polymerization (PLP). The Mark–Houwink–Sakaruda parameters required for the analysis of the molecular weight distributions (MWDs) were obtained by multiple‐detector gel permeation chromatography (GPC) with on‐line viscometry. The small radical created by the fragmentation results in a short‐chain polymer that means the MWD may no longer be given by that expected for “ideal” PLP conditions; simulations suggest that the degree of polymerization required for “ideal” PLP conditions can be obtained from the primary point of inflection provided the GPC traces also show a clear secondary inflection point (radicals terminated by the second, rather than the first, pulse subsequent to initiation). Over the temperature range of 40–75 °C, the data can be best fitted by kp/dm3 mol?1 s?1 = 106.1 exp(?29.5 kJ mol?1), with a moderately large joint confidence interval for the Arrhenius parameters. The data are consistent with an increased activation energy and reduced frequency factor as compared with acrylate or methacrylate; both of these changes can be ascribed to hindrance. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci Part A: Polym Chem 39: 3902–3915, 2001  相似文献   

11.
The polymerization of N‐methyl‐α‐fluoroacrylamide (NMFAm) initiated with dimethyl 2,2′‐azobisisobutyrate (MAIB) in benzene was studied kinetically and with electron spin resonance. The polymerization proceeded heterogeneously with the highly efficient formation of long‐lived poly(NMFAm) radicals. The overall activation energy of the polymerization was 111 kJ/mol. The polymerization rate (Rp) at 50 °C is given by Rp = k[MAIB]0.75±0.05 [NMFAm]0.44±0.05. The concentration of the long‐lived polymer radical increased linearly with time. The formation rate (Rp?) of the long‐lived polymer radical at 50 °C is expressed by Rp? = k[MAIB]1.0±0.1 [NMFAm]0±0.1. The overall activation energy of the long‐lived radical formation was 128 kJ/mol, which agreed with the energy of initiation (129 kJ/mol), which was separately estimated. A comparison of Rp? with the initiation rate led to the conclusion that 1‐methoxycarbonyl‐1‐methylethyl radicals (primary radicals from MAIB), escaping from the solvent cage, were quantitatively converted into the long‐lived poly(NMFAm) radicals. Thus, this polymerization involves completely unimolecular termination due to polymer radical occlusion. 1H NMR‐determined tacticities of resulting poly(NMFAm) were estimated to be rr = 0.34, mr = 0.48, and mm = 0.18. The copolymerization of NMFAm(M1) and St(M2) with MAIB at 50 °C in benzene gave monomer reactivity ratios of r1 = 0.61 and r2 = 1.79. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci Part A: Polym Chem 39: 2196–2205, 2001  相似文献   

12.
3‐Methyl‐3‐(3‐pentyl)‐1,2‐dioxetane 1 and 3‐methyl‐3‐(2,2‐dimethyl‐1‐propyl)‐1,2‐dioxetane 2 were synthesized in low yield by the α‐bromohydroperoxide method. The activation parameters were determined by the chemiluminescence method (for 1 ΔH‡ = 25.0 ± 0.3 kcal/mol, ΔS‡ = −1.0 entropy unit (e.u.), ΔG‡ = 25.3 kcal/mol, k1 (60°C) = 4.6 × 10−4s−1; for 2 ΔH‡ = 24.2 ± 0.2 kcal/mol, ΔS‡ = −2.0 e.u., ΔG‡ = 24.9 kcal/mol, k1 (60°C) = 9.2 × 10−4s−1. Thermolysis of 1–2 produced excited carbonyl fragments (direct production of high yields of triplets relative to excited singlets) (chemiexcitation yields for 1: ϕT = 0.02, ϕ ≤ 0.0005; for 2: ϕT = 0.02, ϕS ≤ 0.0004). The results are discussed in relation to a diradical‐like mechanism. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Heteroatom Chem 12:459–462, 2001  相似文献   

13.
β‐Methyl‐α‐methylene‐γ‐butyrolactone (MMBL) was synthesized and then was polymerized in an N,N‐dimethylformamide (DMF) solution with 2,2‐azobisisobutyronitrile (AIBN) initiation. The homopolymer of MMBL was soluble in DMF and acetonitrile. MMBL was homopolymerized without competing depolymerization from 50 to 70 °C. The rate of polymerization (Rp) for MMBL followed the kinetic expression Rp = [AIBN]0.54[MMBL]1.04. The overall activation energy was calculated to be 86.9 kJ/mol, kp/kt1/2 was equal to 0.050 (where kp is the rate constant for propagation and kt is the rate constant for termination), and the rate of initiation was 2.17 × 10?8 mol L?1 s?1. The free energy of activation, the activation enthalpy, and the activation entropy were 106.0, 84.1, and 0.0658 kJ mol?1, respectively, for homopolymerization. The initiation efficiency was approximately 1. Styrene and MMBL were copolymerized in DMF solutions at 60 °C with AIBN as the initiator. The reactivity ratios (r1 = 0.22 and r2 = 0.73) for this copolymerization were calculated with the Kelen–Tudos method. The general reactivity parameter Q and the polarity parameter e for MMBL were calculated to be 1.54 and 0.55, respectively. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part A: Polym Chem 41: 1759–1777, 2003  相似文献   

14.
Trimethoxyvinylsilane (TMVS) was quantitatively polymerized at 130 °C in bulk, using dicumyl peroxide (DCPO) as initiator. The polymerization of TMVS with DCPO was kinetically studied in dioxane by Fourier transform near‐infrared spectroscopy. The overall activation energy of the bulk polymerization was estimated to be 112 kJ/mol. The initial polymerization rate (Rp) was expressed by Rp = k[DCPO]0.6[TMVS]1.0 at 120 °C, being closely similar to that of the conventional radical polymerization involving bimolecular termination. The polymerization system involved electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopically observable polymer radicals under the actual polymerization conditions. ESR‐determined apparent rate constants of propagation and termination were 13 L/mol s and 3.1 × 104 L/mol s at 120 °C, respectively. The molecular weight of the resulting poly(TMVS)s was low (Mn = 2.0–4.4 × 103), because of the high chain transfer constant (Cmtr = 4.2 × 10?2 at 120 °C) to the monomer. The bulk copolymerization of TMVS (M1) and vinyl acetate (M2) at 120 °C gave the following copolymerization parameters: rl = 1.4, r2 = 0.24, Q1 = 0.084, and e1 = +0.80. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part A: Polym Chem 43: 5864–5871, 2005  相似文献   

15.
Polymerization of N‐(1‐phenylethylaminocarbonyl)methacrylamide (PEACMA) with dimethyl 2,2′‐azobisisobutyrate (MAIB) was kinetically studied in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). The overall activation energy of the polymerization was estimated to be 84 kJ/mol. The initial polymerization rate (Rp) is given by Rp = k[MAIB]0.6[PEACMA]0.9 at 60 °C, being similar to that of the conventional radical polymerization. The polymerization system involved electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopically observable propagating poly(PEACMA) radical under the actual polymerization conditions. ESR‐determined rate constants of propagation and termination were 140 L/mol s and 3.4 × 104 L/mol s at 60 °C, respectively. The addition of LiCl accelerated the polymerization in N,N‐dimethylformamide but did not in DMSO. The copolymerization of PEACMA(M1) and styrene(M2) with MAIB in DMSO at 60 °C gave the following copolymerization parameters; r1 = 0.20, r2 = 0.51, Q1 = 0.59, and e1 = +0.70. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part A: Polym Chem 43: 2013–2020, 2005  相似文献   

16.
The polymerizations of α‐ethyl β‐N‐(α′‐methylbenzyl)itaconamates carrying (RS)‐ and (S)‐α‐methylbenzylaminocarbonyl groups (RS‐EMBI and S‐EMBI) with dimethyl 2,2′‐azobisisobutyrate (MAIB) were studied in methanol (MeOH) and in benzene kinetically and with electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy. The initial polymerization rate (Rp) at 60 °C was given by Rp = k[MAIB]0.58 ± 0.05[RS‐EMBI]2.4 ± 0.l and Rp = k[MAIB]0.61 ± 0.05[S‐EMBI]2.3 ± 0.l in MeOH and Rp = k[MAIB]0.54 ± 0.05[RS‐EMBI]1.7 ± 0.l in benzene. The rate constants of initiation (kdf), propagation (kp), and termination (kt) as elementary reactions were estimated by ESR, where kd is the rate constant of MAIB decomposition and f is the initiator efficiency. The kp values of RS‐EMBI (0.50–1.27 L/mol s) and S‐EMBI (0.42–1.32 L/mol s) in MeOH increased with increasing monomer concentrations, whereas the kt values (0.20?7.78 × 105 L/mol s for RS‐EMBI and 0.18?6.27 × 105 L/mol s for S‐EMBI) decreased with increasing monomer concentrations. Such relations of Rp with kp and kt were responsible for the unusually high dependence of Rp on the monomer concentration. The activation energies of the elementary reactions were also determined from the values of kdf, kp, and kt at different temperatures. Rp and kp of RS‐EMBI and S‐EMBI in benzene were considerably higher than those in MeOH. Rp of RS‐EMBI was somewhat higher than that of S‐EMBI in both MeOH and benzene. Such effects of the kinds of solvents and monomers on Rp were explicable in terms of the different monomer associations, as analyzed by 1H NMR. The copolymerization of RS‐EMBI with styrene was examined at 60 °C in benzene. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part A: Polym Chem 41: 1819–1830, 2003  相似文献   

17.
The bulk polymerization of 2‐ethylhexyl acrylate (2‐EHA), induced by a pulsed electron beam, was investigated with pulse radiolysis, gravimetry, and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy. The roles of the dose rate, pulse frequency, and added acrylic acid (AA) in the polymerization of 2‐EHA were examined at ambient temperature. In the range of 12.6–71.2 Gy/pulse, the polymerization of 2‐EHA was dose‐rate‐dependent: at the same total dose, a lower dose rate yielded a higher conversion. Also, a lower pulse rate gave a higher conversion at the same total dose. The addition of up to 10 wt % AA showed no increase in the conversion of 2‐EHA at a low conversion (8 kGy), but at a higher conversion (16 kGy), a 20 wt % increase in the conversion of 2‐EHA was observed. The estimated values (1.6 ± 0.3) × 10?3 (dm3 s)3/2 mol?1 s?1/2 for kp(G/2kt)1/2 and 2.6 ± 0.8 dm3 s J?1 for 2ktG (where kp is the rate constant of propagation, kt is the rate constant of bimolecular termination, and G is the yield of free radicals) were obtained at relatively low conversions. The reaction rate constant of the addition of 2‐EHA· free radicals to the monomer was measured by pulse radiolysis and found to be 2.8 × 102 mol?1 dm3 s?1. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part A: Polym Chem 41: 196–203, 2003  相似文献   

18.
For the first time, a 1000 Hz pulse laser has been applied to determine detailed kinetic rate coefficients from pulsed laser polymerization–size exclusion chromatography experiments. For the monomer tert‐butyl acrylate, apparent propagation rate coefficients kpapp have been determined in the temperature range of 0–80 °C. kpapp in the range of few hundreds to close to 50 000 L·mol–1·s–1 are determined for low and high pulse frequencies, respectively. The apparent propagation coefficients show a distinct pulse‐frequency dependency, which follows an S‐shape curve. From these curves, rate coefficients for secondary radial propagation (kpSPR), backbiting (kbb), midchain radical propagation (kptert), and the (residual) effective propagation rate (kpeff) can be deduced via a herein proposed simple Predici fitting procedure. For kpSPR, the activation energy is determined to be (17.9 ± 0.6) kJ·mol–1 in excellent agreement with literature data. For kbb, an activation energy of (25.9 ± 2.2) kJ·mol–1 is deduced.

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19.
This article deals with the polyaddition of a novel bis(seven‐membered cyclic carbonate), 1,2‐bis[3‐(1,3‐dioxepan‐2‐one‐5‐yl)‐propylthio]ethane, with the diamines 4,9‐dioxa‐1,12‐dodecanediamine and p‐xylylenediamine. The polyaddition was carried out at 30–70 °C for 6–24 h in dimethyl sulfoxide to obtain the corresponding polyhydroxyurethanes with number‐average molecular weights of 10,900–35,700 in good yields. The reaction of a monofunctional seven‐membered cyclic carbonate, 5‐allyl‐1,3‐dioxepan‐2‐one (7CC), with monoamines was also carried out to examine the reactivity in comparison with that of six‐ and five‐membered cyclic carbonates. The reaction rate constants of 7CC with n‐hexylamine and benzylamine were estimated to be 48.5 and 11.0 L/mol · h, respectively, in dimethyl sulfoxide‐d6 (initial reagent concentration = 1 M) at 30 °C. The seven‐membered cyclic carbonate ring was 2.98 and 5.82 kcal/mol more strained than those of the six‐ and five‐membered cyclic carbonates, respectively, according to a semiempirical molecular orbital calculation with the PM3 Hamiltonian. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci Part A: Polym Chem 39: 4091–4100, 2001  相似文献   

20.
The synthesis of two new isomeric monomers, cis‐(2‐cyclohexyl‐1,3‐dioxan‐5‐yl) methacrylate (CCDM) and trans‐(2‐cyclohexyl‐1,3‐dioxan‐5‐yl) methacrylate (TCDM), starting from the reaction of glycerol and cyclohexanecarbaldehyde, is reported. The process involved the preparation of different alcohol acetals and esterification with methacryloyl chloride of the corresponding cis and trans 5‐hydroxy compounds of 2‐cyclohexyl‐1,3‐dioxane. The radical polymerization reactions of both monomers, under the same conditions of temperature, solvent, monomer, and initiator concentrations, were studied to investigate the influence of the monomer configuration on the values of the propagation and termination rate constants (kp and kt ).The values of the ratio kp /kt 1/2 were determined by UV spectroscopy by the measurement of the changes of absorbance with time at several wavelengths in the range 275–285 nm, where an appropriate change in absorbance was observed. Reliable values of the kinetics constants were determined by UV spectroscopy, showing a very good reproducibility of the kinetic experiments. The values of kp /kt 1/2, in the temperature interval 45–65 °C, lay in the range 0.40–0.50 L1/2/mol1/2s1/2 and 0.20–0.30 L1/2/mol1/2s1/2 for CCDM and TCDM, respectively. Measurements of both the radical concentrations and the absolute rate constants kp and kt were also carried out with electron paramagnetic resonance techniques. The values of kp at 60 °C were nearly identical for both the trans and cis monomers, but the termination rate constant of the trans monomer was about three times that of the cis monomer at the same temperature. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci A: Polym Chem 38: 3883–3891, 2000  相似文献   

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