Controlled high-speed anionic polymerization of propylene oxide initiated by onium salts in the presence of triisobutylaluminum - Archive ouverte HAL Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue International Journal of Biological Macromolecules Année : 2007

Controlled high-speed anionic polymerization of propylene oxide initiated by onium salts in the presence of triisobutylaluminum

Résumé

The conventional anionic polymerization of propylene oxide (Pox) proceeds at a very slow rate in low polar media and is characterized by an important transfer. reaction to monomer. This only allows the formation of poly(propylene oxide) oligomers. A new p olymerization strategy allowing the fast and controlled anionic polymerization of Pox has been developed. It is based on the formation of complexes with both the anionic initiator and the monomer. The influences of alkali metal alkoxides (i-PrONa), ammonium salts (NBu4Cl and NOct(4)Br), and phosphonium salts (PBu4Cl) as initiators, in combination with triisobutylaluminum, have been investigated in terms of reactivity, molar mass control, livingness, and polymerization mechanism. PPOx with narrow polydispersities and controlled molar masses, up to 150 000 g/mol, have been obtained in hydrocarbon media, at low temperature, and in short reaction times.
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Dates et versions

hal-00282454 , version 1 (27-05-2008)

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Amélie Labbé, Stéphane Carlotti, Cyrille Billouard, Philippe Desbois, Alain Deffieux. Controlled high-speed anionic polymerization of propylene oxide initiated by onium salts in the presence of triisobutylaluminum. International Journal of Biological Macromolecules, 2007, 40 (22), pp.7842-7847. ⟨10.1021/ma070288d⟩. ⟨hal-00282454⟩
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