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Kinetic Simulations of Reversible Chain Transfer Catalyzed Polymerization (RTCP): Guidelines to Optimum Molecular Weight Control
Author(s) -
Vana Philipp,
Goto Atsushi
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
macromolecular theory and simulations
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.37
H-Index - 56
eISSN - 1521-3919
pISSN - 1022-1344
DOI - 10.1002/mats.200900064
Subject(s) - polymerization , rtp control protocol , chain transfer , kinetic energy , chemistry , monomer , polymer , molar mass distribution , polymer chemistry , catalysis , thermodynamics , chemical engineering , materials science , radical polymerization , organic chemistry , computer science , physics , computer network , quantum mechanics , network packet , engineering
Kinetic simulations of reversible chain transfer catalyzed polymerization (RTCP) were performed using the program package Predici. Mimicking the RTCP of styrene in bulk at 80 °C, the full molecular weight distributions, the polydispersities of resulting polymer and the time evolutions of monomer conversion and participating species were simulated. The influence of the kinetic coefficients governing the RTCP equilibrium – specifically, the rate coefficients of activation, k a , and deactivation, k da – on the controlled polymerization behavior was probed in detail by varying their respective simulation input values over five orders of magnitude. It was found that optimum results for molecular weight control are obtained for K = k a / k da in the range 1 to 10 and with k a and k da being of the order of 10 6 L · mol −1 · s −1 or above. The influence of degenerative chain transfer on the process was found to be significant only in poorly controlled systems, but is small in well‐controlled RTCP. Based on the finding that the catalyst is depleting during the polymerization due to cross‐termination, guidelines for obtaining high molecular weight material via repeated addition of catalyst were developed.