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Poly( N , N ‐dimethylacrylamide)‐Based Microspheres Prepared by Heterogeneous Polymerizations
Author(s) -
Babič Michal,
Horák Daniel
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
macromolecular reaction engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.37
H-Index - 32
eISSN - 1862-8338
pISSN - 1862-832X
DOI - 10.1002/mren.200600008
Subject(s) - dispersity , materials science , suspension polymerization , polymerization , polymer chemistry , chemical engineering , dispersion polymerization , toluene , particle size , emulsion polymerization , heptane , polymer , chemistry , composite material , organic chemistry , engineering
PDMAAm microspheres have been obtained by inverse suspension, inverse emulsion, and dispersion polymerization. Conventional inverse suspension polymerization in toluene/trichloroethene is modified by the use of ultrasound. The resulting hydrogel microspheres are examined by dynamic light scattering and scanning electron microscopy to afford the morphology, dispersity, and size of the microspheres. Inverse suspension polymerization yields 100‐µm particles, while those obtained by inverse emulsion polymerization are 0.13–1 µm in diameter. While the inverse techniques produce particles of broad size distribution, monodisperse microspheres are obtained by the Kraton G 1650‐stabilized dispersion polymerization of DMAAm in a toluene/heptane medium. The particle size and polydispersity could be controlled by the addition of water into the dispersed phase, and by varying the cellulose acetate butyrate or Kraton G 1650 concentration and the toluene/trichloroethene or toluene/heptane ratio.

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