M. Buback et al., Termination kinetics of styrene free-radical polymerization studied by time-resolved pulsed laser experiments, MACRO CH P, 201(4), 2000, pp. 464-469
The single pulse (SP)-pulsed-laser polymerization (PLP) technique has been
applied to measure k(t)/k(p), the ratio of termination to propagation rate
coefficients, for the free-radical bulk polymerization of styrene at temper
atures from 60 to 100 degrees C and pressures from 1800 to 2650 bar. k(t)/k
(p) is obtained by fitting monomer concentration vs. time traces that are d
etermined via time-resolved (mu s) near infrared monitoring of monomer conv
ersion induced by single excimer laser pulses of about 20 ns width. Styrene
is a difficult candidate for this kind of measurements as conversion per p
ulse is small for this low k(p) and high k(t) monomer. Thus between 160 to
300 SP signals were co-added to yield a concentration vs. time trace of suf
ficient quality for deducing k(t)/k(p) with an accuracy of better than +/-2
0 per cent. With k(p) being known from PLP-SEC experiments, chain-length av
eraged k(t) values are immediately obtained from k(t)/k(p). At given pressu
re and temperature. k(t) is independent of the degree of overall monomer co
nversion, which, within the present study, has been as high as 20 %. The k(
t) value, however, is found to slightly increase with the amount of free ra
dicals produced by a single pulse in laser-induced decomposition of the pho
toinitiator DMPA (2,2'-dimethoxy-2-phenyl acetophenone). This remarkable: o
bservation is explained by DMPA decomposition resulting in the formation of
two free radicals which significantly differ in reactivity. Extrapolation
of SP-PLP k(t) data from experiments at rather different DMPA levels and la
ser pulse energies toward low primary free-radical concentration, yields ve
ry satisfactory agreement of the extrapolated k(t) values with recent liter
ature data front chemically and photochemically induced styrene polymerizat
ions.