La. Belfiore et al., Thermophysical property modifications in functional polymers via lanthanide trichloride hydrates, POLYM ENG S, 41(7), 2001, pp. 1196-1205
Fourteen water-soluble trivalent metal chlorides from lanthanum to lutetium
in the Ist-row of the f-block form complexes with poly(vinylamine) and inc
rease the glass transition temperature from 57 degreesC to well above 100 d
egreesC at very low molar concentrations of the lanthanide. The large ionic
radii of these hard-acid cations allow several hard-base amino sidegroups
in the polymer to occupy sites in the first shell coordination sphere via i
on-dipole (i.e., electrostatic) interactions, which leads to microclusterin
g of the ligands, about a single metal center. The enhancement in the glass
transition temperature is explained in terms of multi-functional coordinat
ion crosslinking. f-Block salts induce larger increases in Tg, relative to
transition metal-complexes from the d-block, however CoCl2(H2O)(6) performs
comparably to some of the more efficient lanthanides. Blends of poly(vinyl
amine) and trimethoxysilyl-propylpoly(ethylene imine)hydrochloride form com
plexes with europium(RI) and exhibit synergistic single Tg response. Since
lanthanides form very stable complexes with chelating (i.e., bidentate) oxy
gen ligands, it is possible to increase the elastic modulus of commercially
important copolymers of ethylene and methacrylic acid via Eu3+ complexatio
n with the carboxylate anion. This claim is verified by infrared spectrosco
py. Temperature and pH-sensitive applications for drug delivery and removal
of contaminants from wastewater streams should increase the utility of the
se lanthanide complexes.