CA1244586A - Dense star polymers: a novel structural class of polymers - Google Patents
Dense star polymers: a novel structural class of polymersInfo
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- CA1244586A CA1244586A CA000444868A CA444868A CA1244586A CA 1244586 A CA1244586 A CA 1244586A CA 000444868 A CA000444868 A CA 000444868A CA 444868 A CA444868 A CA 444868A CA 1244586 A CA1244586 A CA 1244586A
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C07—ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- C07C—ACYCLIC OR CARBOCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
- C07C233/00—Carboxylic acid amides
- C07C233/64—Carboxylic acid amides having carbon atoms of carboxamide groups bound to carbon atoms of six-membered aromatic rings
- C07C233/77—Carboxylic acid amides having carbon atoms of carboxamide groups bound to carbon atoms of six-membered aromatic rings having the nitrogen atom of at least one of the carboxamide groups bound to a carbon atom of a hydrocarbon radical substituted by amino groups
- C07C233/78—Carboxylic acid amides having carbon atoms of carboxamide groups bound to carbon atoms of six-membered aromatic rings having the nitrogen atom of at least one of the carboxamide groups bound to a carbon atom of a hydrocarbon radical substituted by amino groups with the substituted hydrocarbon radical bound to the nitrogen atom of the carboxamide group by an acyclic carbon atom
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K47/00—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient
- A61K47/50—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates
- A61K47/51—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates the non-active ingredient being a modifying agent
- A61K47/56—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates the non-active ingredient being a modifying agent the modifying agent being an organic macromolecular compound, e.g. an oligomeric, polymeric or dendrimeric molecule
- A61K47/59—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates the non-active ingredient being a modifying agent the modifying agent being an organic macromolecular compound, e.g. an oligomeric, polymeric or dendrimeric molecule obtained otherwise than by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds, e.g. polyureas or polyurethanes
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K47/00—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient
- A61K47/50—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates
- A61K47/51—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates the non-active ingredient being a modifying agent
- A61K47/56—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates the non-active ingredient being a modifying agent the modifying agent being an organic macromolecular compound, e.g. an oligomeric, polymeric or dendrimeric molecule
- A61K47/59—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates the non-active ingredient being a modifying agent the modifying agent being an organic macromolecular compound, e.g. an oligomeric, polymeric or dendrimeric molecule obtained otherwise than by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds, e.g. polyureas or polyurethanes
- A61K47/593—Polyesters, e.g. PLGA or polylactide-co-glycolide
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K47/00—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient
- A61K47/50—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates
- A61K47/51—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates the non-active ingredient being a modifying agent
- A61K47/56—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates the non-active ingredient being a modifying agent the modifying agent being an organic macromolecular compound, e.g. an oligomeric, polymeric or dendrimeric molecule
- A61K47/59—Medicinal preparations characterised by the non-active ingredients used, e.g. carriers or inert additives; Targeting or modifying agents chemically bound to the active ingredient the non-active ingredient being chemically bound to the active ingredient, e.g. polymer-drug conjugates the non-active ingredient being a modifying agent the modifying agent being an organic macromolecular compound, e.g. an oligomeric, polymeric or dendrimeric molecule obtained otherwise than by reactions only involving carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds, e.g. polyureas or polyurethanes
- A61K47/595—Polyamides, e.g. nylon
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- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B01—PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
- B01D—SEPARATION
- B01D17/00—Separation of liquids, not provided for elsewhere, e.g. by thermal diffusion
- B01D17/02—Separation of non-miscible liquids
- B01D17/04—Breaking emulsions
- B01D17/047—Breaking emulsions with separation aids
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C07—ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- C07C—ACYCLIC OR CARBOCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
- C07C237/00—Carboxylic acid amides, the carbon skeleton of the acid part being further substituted by amino groups
- C07C237/02—Carboxylic acid amides, the carbon skeleton of the acid part being further substituted by amino groups having the carbon atoms of the carboxamide groups bound to acyclic carbon atoms of the carbon skeleton
- C07C237/04—Carboxylic acid amides, the carbon skeleton of the acid part being further substituted by amino groups having the carbon atoms of the carboxamide groups bound to acyclic carbon atoms of the carbon skeleton the carbon skeleton being acyclic and saturated
- C07C237/10—Carboxylic acid amides, the carbon skeleton of the acid part being further substituted by amino groups having the carbon atoms of the carboxamide groups bound to acyclic carbon atoms of the carbon skeleton the carbon skeleton being acyclic and saturated having the nitrogen atom of at least one of the carboxamide groups bound to an acyclic carbon atom of a hydrocarbon radical substituted by nitrogen atoms not being part of nitro or nitroso groups
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C08—ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
- C08G—MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS OBTAINED OTHERWISE THAN BY REACTIONS ONLY INVOLVING UNSATURATED CARBON-TO-CARBON BONDS
- C08G69/00—Macromolecular compounds obtained by reactions forming a carboxylic amide link in the main chain of the macromolecule
- C08G69/44—Polyester-amides
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C08—ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
- C08G—MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS OBTAINED OTHERWISE THAN BY REACTIONS ONLY INVOLVING UNSATURATED CARBON-TO-CARBON BONDS
- C08G69/00—Macromolecular compounds obtained by reactions forming a carboxylic amide link in the main chain of the macromolecule
- C08G69/48—Polymers modified by chemical after-treatment
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C08—ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
- C08G—MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS OBTAINED OTHERWISE THAN BY REACTIONS ONLY INVOLVING UNSATURATED CARBON-TO-CARBON BONDS
- C08G73/00—Macromolecular compounds obtained by reactions forming a linkage containing nitrogen with or without oxygen or carbon in the main chain of the macromolecule, not provided for in groups C08G12/00 - C08G71/00
- C08G73/02—Polyamines
- C08G73/028—Polyamidoamines
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C08—ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
- C08G—MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS OBTAINED OTHERWISE THAN BY REACTIONS ONLY INVOLVING UNSATURATED CARBON-TO-CARBON BONDS
- C08G83/00—Macromolecular compounds not provided for in groups C08G2/00 - C08G81/00
- C08G83/002—Dendritic macromolecules
- C08G83/003—Dendrimers
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C09—DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- C09D—COATING COMPOSITIONS, e.g. PAINTS, VARNISHES OR LACQUERS; FILLING PASTES; CHEMICAL PAINT OR INK REMOVERS; INKS; CORRECTING FLUIDS; WOODSTAINS; PASTES OR SOLIDS FOR COLOURING OR PRINTING; USE OF MATERIALS THEREFOR
- C09D201/00—Coating compositions based on unspecified macromolecular compounds
- C09D201/005—Dendritic macromolecules
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C09—DYES; PAINTS; POLISHES; NATURAL RESINS; ADHESIVES; COMPOSITIONS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; APPLICATIONS OF MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- C09D—COATING COMPOSITIONS, e.g. PAINTS, VARNISHES OR LACQUERS; FILLING PASTES; CHEMICAL PAINT OR INK REMOVERS; INKS; CORRECTING FLUIDS; WOODSTAINS; PASTES OR SOLIDS FOR COLOURING OR PRINTING; USE OF MATERIALS THEREFOR
- C09D7/00—Features of coating compositions, not provided for in group C09D5/00; Processes for incorporating ingredients in coating compositions
- C09D7/40—Additives
- C09D7/43—Thickening agents
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C10—PETROLEUM, GAS OR COKE INDUSTRIES; TECHNICAL GASES CONTAINING CARBON MONOXIDE; FUELS; LUBRICANTS; PEAT
- C10G—CRACKING HYDROCARBON OILS; PRODUCTION OF LIQUID HYDROCARBON MIXTURES, e.g. BY DESTRUCTIVE HYDROGENATION, OLIGOMERISATION, POLYMERISATION; RECOVERY OF HYDROCARBON OILS FROM OIL-SHALE, OIL-SAND, OR GASES; REFINING MIXTURES MAINLY CONSISTING OF HYDROCARBONS; REFORMING OF NAPHTHA; MINERAL WAXES
- C10G33/00—Dewatering or demulsification of hydrocarbon oils
- C10G33/04—Dewatering or demulsification of hydrocarbon oils with chemical means
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- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C08—ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
- C08L—COMPOSITIONS OF MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS
- C08L101/00—Compositions of unspecified macromolecular compounds
- C08L101/005—Dendritic macromolecules
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- Y—GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y10—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
- Y10S—TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
- Y10S424/00—Drug, bio-affecting and body treating compositions
- Y10S424/16—Dendrimers and dendritic polymers
Abstract
ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE
A novel class of branched polymers containing dendritic branches having functional groups uniformly distributed on the periphery of such branches and more particularly to a dense star polymer having at least one core branch emanating from a core, each core branch having at least one terminal group provided that (1) the ratio of terminal groups to the core branches is greater than 1:1, (2) the density of terminal groups per unit volume in the polymer is at least 1.5 times that of a conventional star polymer having similar core and monomeric moieties and a comparable molecular weight and number of core branches, each of such branches of the conventional star polymer bearing only one terminal group, and (3) a molecular volume that is no more than 60 percent of the molecular volume of said conventional star polymer, the polymer exhibiting increased concentrations of functional groups per unit volume of the polymer macromolecule which is more spheroidal and compact than conventional star branched polymers.
A novel class of branched polymers containing dendritic branches having functional groups uniformly distributed on the periphery of such branches and more particularly to a dense star polymer having at least one core branch emanating from a core, each core branch having at least one terminal group provided that (1) the ratio of terminal groups to the core branches is greater than 1:1, (2) the density of terminal groups per unit volume in the polymer is at least 1.5 times that of a conventional star polymer having similar core and monomeric moieties and a comparable molecular weight and number of core branches, each of such branches of the conventional star polymer bearing only one terminal group, and (3) a molecular volume that is no more than 60 percent of the molecular volume of said conventional star polymer, the polymer exhibiting increased concentrations of functional groups per unit volume of the polymer macromolecule which is more spheroidal and compact than conventional star branched polymers.
Description
5~6 DENSE STAR POLYMERS AND A PROCESS
FOR PR~DUCING DE~SE STAR POLYMERS
This i~vention relates to a no~el class of branched polymers containin~ dendritic branches having functi3nal groups unifor~ly distributed on the periphery of such br~nches. This in~ention also relates ~o pro-cesses for preparing such polymers as w~ll as applica-tions therefore.
.
Org~nic polymers are generally d assified in a structural sense as eith~r li~ear or b~anched. In the case of linear polymers, the repeatlng units ~often lQ call~d mers) are divalent and are connected one to another in a linear se~uence. In the ca~e of branched polymers, at Iea~t some of ~he mers possess a v~lency grea~er than
FOR PR~DUCING DE~SE STAR POLYMERS
This i~vention relates to a no~el class of branched polymers containin~ dendritic branches having functi3nal groups unifor~ly distributed on the periphery of such br~nches. This in~ention also relates ~o pro-cesses for preparing such polymers as w~ll as applica-tions therefore.
.
Org~nic polymers are generally d assified in a structural sense as eith~r li~ear or b~anched. In the case of linear polymers, the repeatlng units ~often lQ call~d mers) are divalent and are connected one to another in a linear se~uence. In the ca~e of branched polymers, at Iea~t some of ~he mers possess a v~lency grea~er than
2 ~uch ~hat the m~rs are connected i~ ~ nonli~ear sequence.
The term~'branching" usually implies th~ ~he individual . 15 molecular unit~ of th~ branches are discrete from the polymer backbone, yet haYe the same chemiGal constitution as ~he polymer backbone. Thus, regularly repeating side groups which are inherent in the monomer structure and/or are of different chemical constitution than the polymer backbone are not considered as branches, e.g., dependent ' -2~ 6 methyl groups of lir:lear polypxopylene. To produce a branched polymer, it i~ necessary to employ an initiator, a monomer, or both that possess at least three moieties that function in the polymerization reaction. Such mono-5 mer or initiators are cften called polyfunctional. Thesimplest hranched polymers are the chain branched poly-mers whexein a linear backbone bears one or more essenti-ally linear pendant groups. This simple form of branch-ing, ofte~n called combobrarlching, may be regular wherein the branch~s axe uniformly a~d regularly distributed on the polymer backbone or irregular wherein the brarlc:hes are dis~ibuted in nonunifon7l or random fashion on the polymer backbone. See T. A. Orofino, ~, 2, 295-314 (1961). An example of regular comb branching is a comb branched polystyrene as described by T. Altores et al. in J. Polymer Sci., Part A, Vol. 3, 4131-4151 (1965) and an example of irregular comb branching is illustrated by graft copolymers as described by Soxe~son e~ al. in "Preparative Methods of Polymer Ch~mistry", 2nd Ed., Interscience Pub-20 lisheEs, 213-214 (lg68).
Another type of branching is exemplified by cross-linked or network polymers wherein the polymer chains are connected via tetravalent compounds, e . g., polyst~rene molecules bridged or cross linked wi th 25 divinyl}:~enzene. In this type of branching, many of the indilvidual branche~ are not linear in that each branch may itsel contain gro~ps pendant from a linear chain.
More impor~antly in netwsrk branching, each polymer macromolecule (backbone) is cross-linked at two or more sites to two other polymer macromolecules. Also the chemical constitution of the cross-linkages may vary f~om that of the pol*mer macromolecules. In this so-called cross-linked or network branched polymer, the ,
The term~'branching" usually implies th~ ~he individual . 15 molecular unit~ of th~ branches are discrete from the polymer backbone, yet haYe the same chemiGal constitution as ~he polymer backbone. Thus, regularly repeating side groups which are inherent in the monomer structure and/or are of different chemical constitution than the polymer backbone are not considered as branches, e.g., dependent ' -2~ 6 methyl groups of lir:lear polypxopylene. To produce a branched polymer, it i~ necessary to employ an initiator, a monomer, or both that possess at least three moieties that function in the polymerization reaction. Such mono-5 mer or initiators are cften called polyfunctional. Thesimplest hranched polymers are the chain branched poly-mers whexein a linear backbone bears one or more essenti-ally linear pendant groups. This simple form of branch-ing, ofte~n called combobrarlching, may be regular wherein the branch~s axe uniformly a~d regularly distributed on the polymer backbone or irregular wherein the brarlc:hes are dis~ibuted in nonunifon7l or random fashion on the polymer backbone. See T. A. Orofino, ~, 2, 295-314 (1961). An example of regular comb branching is a comb branched polystyrene as described by T. Altores et al. in J. Polymer Sci., Part A, Vol. 3, 4131-4151 (1965) and an example of irregular comb branching is illustrated by graft copolymers as described by Soxe~son e~ al. in "Preparative Methods of Polymer Ch~mistry", 2nd Ed., Interscience Pub-20 lisheEs, 213-214 (lg68).
Another type of branching is exemplified by cross-linked or network polymers wherein the polymer chains are connected via tetravalent compounds, e . g., polyst~rene molecules bridged or cross linked wi th 25 divinyl}:~enzene. In this type of branching, many of the indilvidual branche~ are not linear in that each branch may itsel contain gro~ps pendant from a linear chain.
More impor~antly in netwsrk branching, each polymer macromolecule (backbone) is cross-linked at two or more sites to two other polymer macromolecules. Also the chemical constitution of the cross-linkages may vary f~om that of the pol*mer macromolecules. In this so-called cross-linked or network branched polymer, the ,
-3- ~J~
various branches or cross-linkages may be structurally similar (called regular cross-linked) or they may be structurally dissimilar ~called irregularly cross-linked).
~n example of regular cross-linked polymexs is a ladder--type poly(phenylsilsesquinone) as described by Sorenson et al., ~ , at page 390. The foregoing and other types of branched polymers are described by ~. G. Elias in Macro-molecules, Vol. I, P}enum Press, New York (1977).
More recently, there hav~ been developed pol~mers having so-cal~d s~ar ~tructured branchi~g wherein the individual branches radiate out from a nucleus and there are at least 3 branches per nucleus.
Such star branched polymers are illustrated by the poly-quaternary compositions described in USP Nos. 4,036,808 and 4,102,B27. Star branched polymers prepared from ole-fins and unsaturated acids are described in USP 4,141,847.
The star branched polymers offer several advantages over polymers having other types of bra~ching. For example, it is found that the star branched polymers may exhibit higher concentratlons of func~ional groups thus making them more active for their intended purpose. In addition, such star branched polymers are often les~ sensitive to degradation by shearing which is a very useful property in formula-tions such as paints, in e~hanced oil recovery and other viscosity applications. Addlti~nally, the star branched polymers have relatively low intrinsic viscosikies even at high molecular weight.
While ~he star branched polymers offer ma~y of the aorementioned advantages over polymers having more conventional branching, it is highly desirable to provide polymers which exhibit even greater concentrations of functional groups per unit volume of the polymer macro-molecule as well as a more uniform distribu-tion of such functional groups in the exterior:regi.ons of the macro-molecule. In addition, it is often de!sircible to provide polymers having macromolecular configurations that are more spheroidal and compact than are t:he star branched.
polymers .
In i~s broadest aspect, this invention is a dense star pol~mer ha~ing at least one branch (herein~
after called a core branch) emanati~g from a core, each core branch having at least one terminal group provided that (1) ~he ratio of ~erminal groups to the core branches is greater than 1:1, preferably 2:1 or more, (2) the density of terminal groups per unit volume in the pol~mer is at least 1.5 times that of a conventional star polymer having similar core and monomeric moieties and a compar-~ble molecular weight and number of core branches, each o~ such branches of the conventional star polymer beaxing only one terminal group, and (3~ a molecular volume that is no more than 60 percent of the moleculax volume of ~0 said conventionai star pol~mer as determined by dimen-sio~al studies using s~aled Corey-Pauling molecular models. For purposes of this invention, the term "dense"
a~ it modifies "star polymer" mea~s that it has a smaller molecular volume than a conYentional star polymer having the same molecular weight. The conventional star polymer which is used as the ~ase for comparison with the dense ctar polymer is one that has the same molecular, same core and monomeric co~ponents and s2me number of core branches as ~he dense star polymer. In addition while the number of t~rminal groups is greater for the dense s~ar polymer molecu~e than in ~le conventional s~ar pol~mer molecule, the chemical structure of the terminal : groups is the s~me.
` 5~
In a somewhat more limited and preferred aspect, this invention is a polymer having a novel ordered star branched structure ~herein called starburst structure).
Hereinafter this polymer having a starburst structure is 5 called a dendrimer. Thus, a "dendrimer" is a polymer having a polyvalent core that is covalently bonded to at least two ordered dendri~ic (treelike) branches which extend through at least two generations. As a~ illustra-tion, an ordered second generation dendritic branch is depicted by the following configuration:
.
b Ia wherein "a" represents the first yeneration a~d "b"
represents the second generation. An ordered, third generation dendritic branch is depicted by the following co~figuration:
r b y b ~o 1~
.
wherein 'la" and "bli represent the first and second gen-era~ion, respectively, and "c" represen~s the third gPn-era~ion. A primary characteristic of the ordered den-dritic branch which distinguishes it from co~ventional branches of convçntional polymers is the uniform or 5~3~
~6-essentially symmetrical character of t;he branches as is shown in the foregoing illustrations. In addition, with each new generation, the number of terminal groups on the dend.ritic branch is an exact multiple of the number of terminal groups in ~he previous ~eneration.
~ nother aspect of this invention is a process for producing the dense star polymer c:omprising the steps o~ O .
(A) contacting ~1) a core compou~d haviny at l~ast one nucleophilic or one electrophilic moiety (here-inafter referred to in the alter~ative as N/E
moieties) with (2) an excess o~ a first organic coreac-~5 tant ~aving (a) o~e moiety (herei~after called a core reacti~e moiety) which is reactive with the ~/E moietie~ of the core compound and (b) an N~E moiety which does not react with the N/E moi-ety of the core under conditions suficient to form a core add~ct wherein each N/E moiety of the cor~ compound has reacted with the core reac-tive moiety of a different molecule of the first coreact~nt;
~B) co~tacting (1) ~he core adduct having at least twice the number of N/E moieties as ~he core compound with (2~ an excess of a second organic coreac-tant having (a~ one moiety (hereinater called a~ adduct reactive moiety~ which will react with the N~E moieties of the core adduct and (b) an N/E
moiety which does not react with the N/E moiety of ~7~ 36 the core adduct under conditions suffl~::ient to foxm a first generation addu.ct havirlg a number of N/E moie~ies that are a~ lea.st twice ~he n~lmber of N/E moietles in the core adduct; and ( C ) contactins~ the firs* generation adduct with an excess of a third organic coreactant having one moiety that is r~active with the N/E moieties OI
the first genera kion adduct and an N/E moiety ~hat does not xeac~ with ~he N/~; moieties of ~:he first ~eneration adduct under condi~ions sufficient ~o iiorm a seco~d generation dendrimerO In the fore~
going pxocess, the first coreactan~ differs from the second coreactant, and the second coreactant differs fr~n the third coreactant, but the first and third coreactants may be the same or different compounds. The third and higher generatiorl dendri-mers are ~orrned by repeating step~ ) and ( C ) of th~ aforementioned process.
Other aspecl~s o ~:his invention are methods for using the dense s~ar pol~ner in ~uch applications as demulsifiers for oil/water emulsivns, wet strength agents in the manu~acture of paper, agents for modifying visco~-ity in aqueous formulations such as pain~s and ~he like.
~or ~cample, i~ a demulsificatior3 m~thod, an ~m~lsion of oil and water i~ con~acted with a demulsifying amount of the d0nse star polymer under conditions sufficient to cause phase separation.
The dens~ star polymers of the present inVen-tion exhibit ~he following propex~ies which are unigue ox are superior to similar properties of conventional star branched polymexs and other branched polymers ha~ing sim-ilar molecular weight a~d terminal groups:
(a) greater branch density;
(b~ greater terminal group d nsity;
(c) ~reater accessibility oi-^ terminal group~
to chemically reactive species; a~ld (d) lower viscosity.
In the dense star polymers of the present inYention, the core is covalently bonded to at least one core branch, prefer~bly at least two, most pre~erably at least three, core branches with each core branch having a calculated length of a~ leas~ 3 Angs~rom units (A) (0.3 nm), preferably at least 4 A (0.4 nm~, most preferably at least 6 A (O.6 nm). These polymers preferably h~ve an average of at least 2, more preerab1y at least 3 and most preferably at least 4 terminal groups per pol~mer molecule. Preferably~ the core branches have x dendritic character, most preferably an ordered dendritic character as defined hereinafter. In pxeferred dense star p~l~mers~ the tenminal groups are func~ional groups that ar~ sufficient~y reactive to undergo addltion or subs~itution reactions. Examples of such functional yroups include amino, hydroxy, mercap~o, carboxy, alkenyl, allyl~ vinyl, amido, halo, urea, vxira~yl, aziridinyl, o~azolinyl, imidazolinyl, sNl~onato, phosphonato, isocyanato and isothiocyanato. The dense star polymers ~iffex from co~ven~ional star or s~ar~branched pol~mers in that the dense star polym~rs have a greater concentra- -tion of t~rminal groups per unit of mol~culax volume than do conventional star polymers having an equivalent number of core branches and an eguivalent core branch length.
Thus, the density of terminal groups per unit volume in the dense star polymex is at leas~ 1.5 times the densit.y of terminal groups in the conventional star polymer, 9 3~2'~
.
preferably at least 5 tlmes, more preferably at least lO
times, most preferably fxom 15 to 50 times. The ratio of terminal groups per core branch in the dense polymer is preferably at least 2, more preferably at least 3, most preferably from 4 to 1024. Preferably, for a given polymer molecular weight, the molecular volume of the dense star polymer is no more than 50 volume percent, more preferably from 16 to 50, most prefexably from 7 to 40 volume percent of the molecular volume of the conven-tional star polymer.
I~ the preferred polyamidoamine dense starpolymers, the densi~y of terminal ~primary) amine mol-eties in the polymer is readily expressed as the molar ràtio of primary amine moieties to the total of secondary and tertiary ~mine moieties. In such polymers this 1 amine:(2~amino + 3 amine) is preferably from 0;37:1 to 1.33:1, more preferably from 0.69:1.to 1.2~ ost prefer-ably from 1~1:1 to 1.2:1.
The preferred dendrimers of ~he prese~t inven-tion are charac~erized as having a poly~alent coxe ~hatis covalently bonded to at least two ordered dendritic branche~ which ex~end ~hrough at least two genera~ions.
Such ordered branchi~g can be illustrated by the follo~-ing seguence wherein G indica~es the number of genexa-tions:
~-1 G=2 N~- ._ .N ~
~ }
/ \ ~ N ~tl~N
/ \ ~ \
~ H H H
10~ ~ ~J~L~5;~36' G=3 .N--_~
,~
~ N~ ~ N~, N N N
H EI ~ H H ~
~ athematically, the relationship between ~he nurr~er of tenninal groups on a dendritic branc:h and the nu~ber of generatiorls oX the branch c:an be represented 10 as follo~s-# of texrninal groups = N Gper dendritic branch r ''' wherein G is ~he number o.f gerl~ra:tions and Mr is the repeatirlg unit multiplicity which is a~ leas~ 2 as in :15 the case o:~ amines. The total rlumber of terminAl groups in the dendrimer is determined by the following # of terminal groups = N~ NrG
p~r dendrim~r 2 wherein G and Nr are as defined b~fore and Nc represents 20 the valency ~often called core funtionality) of the core compound. Accordingly, the dendrimers of the preser~t invention ~an }:~e represented in i ts component parts as follow~ ~
fi ~ermin ~Core) ~(Repeat Unit)N G l ~MoietyJ N G
Nr-l 2 wherein the Core, Terminal Moiety, G and Nc are as defined before and the Repeat Unit has a valency or functionality of Nr + 1 wherein Nr is as defi~ed before.
.
An illustration of a fu~ctionally active dehdrimer of a ternary or txivalent core which has three ordered, second genera~ion den~ritic branches is depicted by the followlng configuration:
Z~Z Z~,Z
> b ~ ~ ~
X . I 2 ¦a Z b _ b Z
\~ y - 'Z Z
whexein.I is a ~rivalent coxe atom ox molecule having a covalent bo~d with each of the three dendritic branches, Z is a texminal moiety an~ "a~' and "b" are as defined hereinbefore. An example o~ such a ternary dendrimer is polyamidoamine-represented by the following structura~
foxmula:
~2NY \ / ~ 2 N N
Ib ~2NY \ NY ¦b/ YN
\~ ~
I a E2NY ~ b / \ ~ / YNH2 ~2NY
wherein Y represents a divalent amide moiety such as O . .
-~2CE2CNHC~2CH2 -and "a" and "b" indicate first and second generations, xespectively. In ~hese two illus~rations, Nc is 3 and Nr is 2. In ~he la~ter of th~ two illustra~ions, the ~epeat Unit is YN. While ~he foregoing configuration and formula illustrate a txivale~t core, the core atom or molecule may be any monovalent or monofunc~ional moiety or any polyvalent or polyfunctional moiety, preferably a polyva-lent or polyfunctional moiety having from 2 to 2300 valence bonds or functional sites available for bonding with the dendritic branches, most preferably from 2 to 200 valence bonds or functional sites. In cases wherein ~he core is a monovalent or monofunctional moi~ty, the ` 13~ 5~
dense star has only one core branch and must be compared with a linear polymer in order to determine appropriate terminal group density and molecular volume. Accoxdingly, this dense star must have at least 2 generations in order to exhibit the desired density of terminal groups. Also, Y may be any other divalent organic moiety 5uch as, for example~ alkylene r alkylene oxide, alkyleneamine, wi~h the depicted amide moiety being the most preferred. In addition to amine, the terminal groups of ~he dendrimer may be any ~unc~ionally active moiety that can be used to propagate the dendri~ic branch to ~he next generatio~.
E~amples of such other moieties include carboxy, aziridinyl, oxazolinyl, haloalkyl, oxiranyl, hydroxy and isocyanato, with ~nine or carbo~ylic ester moietie~ being preferred.
While the dendrimexs preferably have dendritic branches having 2 to 6 generations, dendrimers having dendritic branches up to 12 generations are suitably made and employed in the practice of this inve~tion.
More prefer~bly, the amidoamine dendim~rs of -this in~ention are represented by the formula:
~
2~N~ ~-N [C~2CCN~-B-N~Z~
. . 25 ~ R R 2Jn wherein A is a n~v~lent core derived from a nucleophilic compound, R is hydrosen or lower alkyl, B is a divalent moiety capable of linking a~ine groups, n i~ an integer of 3 or more correspondin~ to the number of the core branches and Z is hydrogen or a --14-- ~ z~ 5~
H" Rl ; ClI 2CCNHB~
R ~ Rl wherein Rl is hydrogen or C~ CCNHBN
2, .
.
wherein each generation is repxesented by Rl .
. -C~ CCN~-~-N
2, Rl .
\ /
More preerably A is a.core such as N
~ ~ .
,~ NC~ ~C}~2N o~r `~
~ NC~ ~2NCH2~H2N ;.
R is hydrog~n or methyl; ~ i~ the divalen~ residue of a polyamine, most preferably an alkylene polyamine such as ethylene diamine or a polyalkylene polyamine such as triethylene tetramine; n is an integer from 3 to ~000, more preferably from 3 to 1000, most preferably from 3 to 125, and Z is most preferably ~' .
-15 :~J~5 2CC~NH 2 R
~
C~I2(~cN~lBN(CH2CC~ 2 ~ or E;~ R
~ r ~ ~ 1 -C~CCN~M lC~2CCNHBN( C~2C CNHBN~2 )2 3 .
The dense star polymers of this in~ention are readily prepared by reacting a compound capable of gener- ..
ating a poly~ralent core with a compound or compounds which causes propagation of dendritic branches from ~he 20 coxe. In one method o preparing the~e dendrimers ~herein c~lled the successive exce~s reactant method), it is es~ential to maintain an exc:ess of coreactant to reactive moieties i~ the terminal g::oups in the c:ore, core adduct or subs~s;ruent adducts and dendrimers irl ord~r to prevent : 25 cross-linking and to maintairl the ordered character of the dendritic brarlche~. In general, this excess of coreact~nt to rea~:tive moieties in the terminal groups is . from 2:1 to 12~:1, prefera~ly from 3:1 to 20 1 on a molar basis .
3û Alternatively, ~e compound capable of gener-ating a pol~Talent core, W(X)n, wherein W is the polyva-lent c:ore atom and is covaleIltly bonded to nX reactive terminal groups (n~2 ), is reacted wi~h a par~,ially pro--16~
tected mul~ifunctional reagent, T~U)~m, wherein U repre-sents a multivalent moiety covalently bonded to ~ pro-tected moieties (m>2), and to one T, a moiety capable of rea::ting with X to forrn W[ (X' ~T~ m]n, wherein X and T
represent the residue of reaction between X and X. This first generation compound is then sub; ected to activation conditions whereby 1:he ~3moieties are made r~active (depro-tected ) and reacted with the parkially protected multifunc-tiorlal reagent, T U~, to form the second generation pro-10 tected dendrimer, ~ 3 ~ mT U~7m~n. This protecteddendrimer can be activated arld reacted again in a similar ma~ner to provide the third generation pro~ected de:ndrimer.
Both the successive excess reactant and the partially pro-tected reactant method are specifically illustrated here 15 inafter.
~ ?he successive excess reactant method of pre-paxing ~he dendrimers is illustrated by the preparation of the aforementioned ternary dendritic polyamidoamine~
In ~hi~ me~hod, ammonia, a nucleophilic core compound, is ~0 fir~t reac~ed wi~h methyl acrylate under condition~ suffi-cie~t to cause the Michael addition of one molecule of the ~mmonia to three molecules of the methyl acrylate to form the following core adduct:
'~3C02C~2~ ~CH2CH2~02C~3 25N.
I .
C~2C~2Co2c~3 Following removal of unreacted methyl acrylate, this compound is then reacted with excess ethylenediamine under conditions such that one amine group of the ethyl-` 17 ~ 5~
enediamine molecule reaGts with the methyl carboxylategroups of the core adduct to form a first:generation adduct having three amidoamine moiPties represented by the formula:
S O
N(CH~CH2-CNHC~2CH~N~2)3 The molar excess of e~hyl~ne diamine to methyl acrylate moieties is preferably ~ro~ 4:1 to S0:1. Fol}owing removal o unreacted e-thylenediamin~, this first ge:nera-tion adduct is then reac~ed with excess methyl acrylate under Michael's addition conditions to form a second - generation adduct having terminal methyl ester moieties:
O O
, ~,i ,.
_N[C~2C~2CN~C~2c~2N(CH2 3)2]3 which is then reacted with.excess ethyle~ediamine under amide fo~ming conditions to produce the desired polyamido~
amine dendrimer having ordexed, second generation dendritic branches with terminal amine moie~ies. The molar excess of coreactant to reactive moieties in each case is prefer-: ~bly fro~ o 40:1, most preferably from 3:1 to 1~:1. Similar dendrimers containing amidoamine moi~ti s can be made by using organic amines as the core compound, e.g., ethylenediamine which produces a tetra-branched dendrimer or diethylene~riamine which produces a penta--branched dendrimer.
Other dendrimers made by the successive excess reactant method are polysulfides made by (1) r~acting a ~18~
polythiol, C(CH2SH)4, under basic conclitions with epichlorosulfide to form the first generation polyepisul-fide, c[CH2SCH2C~S ~ 2~4 a~d (2) then reacting this polyepisulfide with hydrogen sulfide to form khe firs~ generation poly~ulfide which can be further reacted with epichlorosul~ide and hydrogen sulfide ~o form ~ubseguent gen~rations. The conditions and pxocedures which may be suitably employed for polysul-fide formation are generally described in Weissberger, , Interscienc~ Publi~hers, N.Y., 605 (1964) and .
Meade et al., J. Chem. Soc., 189~ ~1948~. Polyaminosul-fide dendrimers can be prepared by reacting ammonia or an amine having a pluxality of primary amine groups with an excess of ethylene sulfide.to form a polysulfide and then with excess aziridine to form a first generation - polyaminosulfide which can be reacted with ex~ess e~hyl~
ene sulfide a~d then wi~h excess aziridi~e to form.further generations using general reaction conditions described in USP 2,105,845 and Nat~an et al., ~ ~m Ch- soc , 63, 2361 (1941). The polyeth~r or polysulfide dendrimers can al~o be prepared by the exces~ reactant method by reacting héxahaloben2ene with phenol of ~hiophenol to form a irst generation polyaryle~her or polyarylsulfide and then with excess halogen to form ~he first generation polyhaloaryl-polysulfide and then wi~h further phenol or thiophenol to form further generations according to the procedures and ~0 conditions as described by D. D. MacNicol et al., Tetra-h~de7~ L~Ct~r~, 23, 4131-4 (1982).
-19~ i8~;
Illustrative of the partially protected .reac-tant method, a polyol such as pentaery~hritol, C(CH20H)4, is employed as the polyvalent core genexat.ing compound and is converted to alkali metal salt form, e.g., sodium or 5 lithium, by reaction with alkali metal hydroxide or zero valence alkali metal and then reacted with a molar excess of a partially protected csmpound such as tosylate ester of l-ethyl~4-hydroxymethyl-2,6,7-trioxabicyclo[2,2,2.]oc~
tane to form a protected first generation polyether, ' ~2~
C~CH2ocH2c-c~2o-cc~2cH334 \
~2 which is then activated by reacting with asid such as hydrochloric acid to form the unprotected first genera-~ 2 ~2C[c~20~]3)4 This polyetheris conver~ed to alkali metal salt form by reaction wi~h al~ali metal hydroxide or zero valence alkali metal a~d then reacted with a molar exces~ of the partially p.ro-tected to$ylate ether to form ~he protected second gener-atio~ polyether. The foregoing seguence is repeated as desired for additior~al generation development accordirlg tc) conditio}ls and procedures d~scribed in Endo e~ al., J.
~, Polym. L2tt. Ed., 18, 457 ( 1980 ), Yokoyama e~ al ., ~la , 15, 11-17 ( 198~ ~, and Pedias et al ., 2S Macromolecules, 15, 217-223 ( 1982 ) . These polyether den-drimers are particularly desirable for use in highly alka-line or highly acidic media wherein hydrolysi~ of a poly-amidoamine dendrimer would be unacceptable. As an example of other dendrimers that are suitably prepared by the par-tially protected reactant method, polyamine dendrimers may be prepared by reacting ammo~ia or an amine having a plu-rality of primary amine groups with N-substitute~ az~ri-dine such as N-tosyl aziridine, 20~ 6 S0 N / ¦ 2 .
to form a p~otected first generation polysul~onamide 5 and then activated wi~h acid such as hydrochloric acid to form the first generation polyamine salt and reacted with fux~her N-~osyl aziridine to ~onm the protected sesond generation polysulfonamide which se~uence can be repeated to produce higher generation poly~mines using the general reaction conditions described in ~umrichause, C. P., PhD Thesis from University of Pennsylvania, "N-Sub-stituted Aziridines as Alkylating Agents", Ref. No. 66-10, 624 (1966).
.
In ei~her of the foregoing methods of den-drimer preparation, water or hydrogen sulfide may be employed as nucleophilic cores for ~he production of binary ~endrimers. Examples of other nucleophilic core c~mpounds include phosphine, polyalkylene polyamines such as diethyle~etri~mine, trie~hylenetetramine, tetraethyl-enepent~mine and both linear and branched polyethyleni-mine; primary amiAes such as methylamine, hydroxyethyl-~ine, octadecylamine and polymethylenedi~mines such as hexame~hylenediamine; polyami~oalkylarenes such a~ 1,3,5--tris(aminome~hyl~benze~e; tris(aminoalkyl)amines such as tristaminoe~hyl)amine; heterocyclic amines such as imid aæolines and piperidines; and various other amines such as hydro~yethylaminoethylamine, mercaptoe~hylamine, mor-pholine, piperazine, amino derivatives of polyvinylbenzyl chloride and o~her benzylic polyamines such as tris(l,3,5-3Q -aminomethyl)benzene. Other suitable nucleophilic cores ~ -21- ~J~5~6 include polyols such as the aforementioned pentaerythri~
tol, ethylene glycol and polyalkylene polyols such~as polyethylene glycol and pol~propylene glycol; 1,2-dimer captoethane and polyalkylene pol~nercaptans; thiophenols, and phenols. Of the coxe compounds, ammonia and the polyalkylene polyamines are preferred for th preparation of polyamidoamine dendrimers by the successiYe excess reactant me~hod and the polyols are pre~erred for the preparation of polyether dendrimers by the partially pro~ected reactant method.
Examples of coreactant materials used to react with the nucleophilic core compounds include ethylenically unsaturated carboxylic esters and amides as well as esters, acids and nitriles containing an acrylyl ~oiety such as, for example, methyl acrylate, ethyl acrylate, acrylonitrile, methyl itaconate, dim~thyl fumarates, maleic anhydride, acrylamide, with methyl acry-late being the preerred coreactant material. In gen-eral other preferred unsaturated reac~an~ are volatile or otherwise readily removed from ~he core/coreactant reaction products without deleteriously affecting the reac~ion produc~.
Ex~pIes of the second cQreactant materials used to react with the adduct of the nucleophilic core and the first coreactant include various polyamines such as alkylene polyamines and polyalkylene polyamines such as ethylenediami~e and diethylenetriamine; benzylic polyamines such as tris(1,3,5-aminomethyl)benzene; alka-nolamines such as ethanolamine; and aziridine and deriva-tives ~hereof such as N-aminoethyl aziridine. Of these second coreactan~ ma~erials, the volatile polyamines such as ethylenediamine and die~hylenetriamine are preerred, wi~h ethylenediamine being e~pecially preferred.
-2~ ,L~
Alternatively, the dendrimers can be prepared by reacting an electrophilic core such as a polyester with a coreactant such as a polyamine to form a core add~ct which is then reacted with a suitable second coreactant such as an unsa~urated ester to form ~le first generation polyamidoamine. Thereafter, this first generation prod-uct i5 reacted with a suitable third coreactant such as polyamine and then wi~h th~ second coreacta~t such as unsa~urated ester to form the desired seco~d ge~eration den~rimer. Ex~mples of suitable ele~trophili~ cores include the Cl-C~ alkyl estexs of various polycaxboxylic acids such as benzene ~ricarboxylic acid, oxalic ac:id, terphthalic acid and various other carboxylic acids represented by the formula:
- YtCo~æ
.
wherein Y is hydrocarbyl or a hydrocarbon polyl wherein - the hydrocarbon radical is alkyl, aryl, cycloalkyl, alkyl-ene, arylene, cycloalkylene, and corresponding trivalent, tetravalent, pentavalent and hexavalent radicals of such hydrocarbons; and Z is a whole number from 1 to 6. Pre-ferred el~c~rop~ilic cores include poly(methyl acrylates), poly(acryloyl chloride), poly(methacryloyl chloride~, alkyl acrylateJalkyl methacrylate copolymer~, polymers of alkyl fumarates, and polymers of alkyl itaconates.
Of the electrophilic core~, alkyl acrylate/alkyl meth-acrylate copolym~rs and alkyl acrylate/alkyl itaconate copolymers are most preferred.
Suitable first coreactan-ts for reaction with ~he electrophilic core include polyalkylene polyamines -~2~5~
~23--sus~h as ethylenedia}nine, diethylenetriamine, triethyl-enetetramine and other polyamines represented by the for~
mula:
Rl R2 ~CnH2nN)m~
wherein Rl and R2 independently represent hydrogen or an aikyl, preferably Cl-C4 alkyl, hydroa~alkyl, cyanoalkyl, or amido; n is at least 2 and preferably 2 to 6 arld~ m is 2 ~o 100, preferably 2 to 5. E~amples of suitable second corea t:ants to be used in preparing dendrimers from elec~
trophilic cores include alkyl esters of ethylenically unsa~u~ated carboxylic acids such as methyl acrylate, methyl methacrylate, ethyl acrylate and the like. Exam-ples of suitable t:hird coreactants are thos illustrated for the first coreactan~.
Thus prepared, the derldrimars ~an be reacted with a wide variety of compounds to produce the poly~lmc-tional c:ompolmds having the uniç[u~ characteris~ics that are a~tribu~able to the s~ruc~ure of the dendrim2r. For example, a dendrimer having terminal amine moieties, as in the pol~amidoamine dendrimexr may be reacted with an uns~turated nitrile to yield a polynitrile (~itrile-ter-minated~ dendrimer. Alternatively, ~he polyamidoamine dendrimer may be reac ted with ( 1 ) an ~ ethylenically msaturated amide to form a polyarnide ( amide-terminated) dendrimer, (2) an ~ ethylenically unsa~urated ester to form a polyester (ester-terminated~ dendrimer, (3) an oxi-rane to yield a polyol (hydroxy~terminated) dendrimer, or 58~
various branches or cross-linkages may be structurally similar (called regular cross-linked) or they may be structurally dissimilar ~called irregularly cross-linked).
~n example of regular cross-linked polymexs is a ladder--type poly(phenylsilsesquinone) as described by Sorenson et al., ~ , at page 390. The foregoing and other types of branched polymers are described by ~. G. Elias in Macro-molecules, Vol. I, P}enum Press, New York (1977).
More recently, there hav~ been developed pol~mers having so-cal~d s~ar ~tructured branchi~g wherein the individual branches radiate out from a nucleus and there are at least 3 branches per nucleus.
Such star branched polymers are illustrated by the poly-quaternary compositions described in USP Nos. 4,036,808 and 4,102,B27. Star branched polymers prepared from ole-fins and unsaturated acids are described in USP 4,141,847.
The star branched polymers offer several advantages over polymers having other types of bra~ching. For example, it is found that the star branched polymers may exhibit higher concentratlons of func~ional groups thus making them more active for their intended purpose. In addition, such star branched polymers are often les~ sensitive to degradation by shearing which is a very useful property in formula-tions such as paints, in e~hanced oil recovery and other viscosity applications. Addlti~nally, the star branched polymers have relatively low intrinsic viscosikies even at high molecular weight.
While ~he star branched polymers offer ma~y of the aorementioned advantages over polymers having more conventional branching, it is highly desirable to provide polymers which exhibit even greater concentrations of functional groups per unit volume of the polymer macro-molecule as well as a more uniform distribu-tion of such functional groups in the exterior:regi.ons of the macro-molecule. In addition, it is often de!sircible to provide polymers having macromolecular configurations that are more spheroidal and compact than are t:he star branched.
polymers .
In i~s broadest aspect, this invention is a dense star pol~mer ha~ing at least one branch (herein~
after called a core branch) emanati~g from a core, each core branch having at least one terminal group provided that (1) ~he ratio of ~erminal groups to the core branches is greater than 1:1, preferably 2:1 or more, (2) the density of terminal groups per unit volume in the pol~mer is at least 1.5 times that of a conventional star polymer having similar core and monomeric moieties and a compar-~ble molecular weight and number of core branches, each o~ such branches of the conventional star polymer beaxing only one terminal group, and (3~ a molecular volume that is no more than 60 percent of the moleculax volume of ~0 said conventionai star pol~mer as determined by dimen-sio~al studies using s~aled Corey-Pauling molecular models. For purposes of this invention, the term "dense"
a~ it modifies "star polymer" mea~s that it has a smaller molecular volume than a conYentional star polymer having the same molecular weight. The conventional star polymer which is used as the ~ase for comparison with the dense ctar polymer is one that has the same molecular, same core and monomeric co~ponents and s2me number of core branches as ~he dense star polymer. In addition while the number of t~rminal groups is greater for the dense s~ar polymer molecu~e than in ~le conventional s~ar pol~mer molecule, the chemical structure of the terminal : groups is the s~me.
` 5~
In a somewhat more limited and preferred aspect, this invention is a polymer having a novel ordered star branched structure ~herein called starburst structure).
Hereinafter this polymer having a starburst structure is 5 called a dendrimer. Thus, a "dendrimer" is a polymer having a polyvalent core that is covalently bonded to at least two ordered dendri~ic (treelike) branches which extend through at least two generations. As a~ illustra-tion, an ordered second generation dendritic branch is depicted by the following configuration:
.
b Ia wherein "a" represents the first yeneration a~d "b"
represents the second generation. An ordered, third generation dendritic branch is depicted by the following co~figuration:
r b y b ~o 1~
.
wherein 'la" and "bli represent the first and second gen-era~ion, respectively, and "c" represen~s the third gPn-era~ion. A primary characteristic of the ordered den-dritic branch which distinguishes it from co~ventional branches of convçntional polymers is the uniform or 5~3~
~6-essentially symmetrical character of t;he branches as is shown in the foregoing illustrations. In addition, with each new generation, the number of terminal groups on the dend.ritic branch is an exact multiple of the number of terminal groups in ~he previous ~eneration.
~ nother aspect of this invention is a process for producing the dense star polymer c:omprising the steps o~ O .
(A) contacting ~1) a core compou~d haviny at l~ast one nucleophilic or one electrophilic moiety (here-inafter referred to in the alter~ative as N/E
moieties) with (2) an excess o~ a first organic coreac-~5 tant ~aving (a) o~e moiety (herei~after called a core reacti~e moiety) which is reactive with the ~/E moietie~ of the core compound and (b) an N~E moiety which does not react with the N/E moi-ety of the core under conditions suficient to form a core add~ct wherein each N/E moiety of the cor~ compound has reacted with the core reac-tive moiety of a different molecule of the first coreact~nt;
~B) co~tacting (1) ~he core adduct having at least twice the number of N/E moieties as ~he core compound with (2~ an excess of a second organic coreac-tant having (a~ one moiety (hereinater called a~ adduct reactive moiety~ which will react with the N~E moieties of the core adduct and (b) an N/E
moiety which does not react with the N/E moiety of ~7~ 36 the core adduct under conditions suffl~::ient to foxm a first generation addu.ct havirlg a number of N/E moie~ies that are a~ lea.st twice ~he n~lmber of N/E moietles in the core adduct; and ( C ) contactins~ the firs* generation adduct with an excess of a third organic coreactant having one moiety that is r~active with the N/E moieties OI
the first genera kion adduct and an N/E moiety ~hat does not xeac~ with ~he N/~; moieties of ~:he first ~eneration adduct under condi~ions sufficient ~o iiorm a seco~d generation dendrimerO In the fore~
going pxocess, the first coreactan~ differs from the second coreactant, and the second coreactant differs fr~n the third coreactant, but the first and third coreactants may be the same or different compounds. The third and higher generatiorl dendri-mers are ~orrned by repeating step~ ) and ( C ) of th~ aforementioned process.
Other aspecl~s o ~:his invention are methods for using the dense s~ar pol~ner in ~uch applications as demulsifiers for oil/water emulsivns, wet strength agents in the manu~acture of paper, agents for modifying visco~-ity in aqueous formulations such as pain~s and ~he like.
~or ~cample, i~ a demulsificatior3 m~thod, an ~m~lsion of oil and water i~ con~acted with a demulsifying amount of the d0nse star polymer under conditions sufficient to cause phase separation.
The dens~ star polymers of the present inVen-tion exhibit ~he following propex~ies which are unigue ox are superior to similar properties of conventional star branched polymexs and other branched polymers ha~ing sim-ilar molecular weight a~d terminal groups:
(a) greater branch density;
(b~ greater terminal group d nsity;
(c) ~reater accessibility oi-^ terminal group~
to chemically reactive species; a~ld (d) lower viscosity.
In the dense star polymers of the present inYention, the core is covalently bonded to at least one core branch, prefer~bly at least two, most pre~erably at least three, core branches with each core branch having a calculated length of a~ leas~ 3 Angs~rom units (A) (0.3 nm), preferably at least 4 A (0.4 nm~, most preferably at least 6 A (O.6 nm). These polymers preferably h~ve an average of at least 2, more preerab1y at least 3 and most preferably at least 4 terminal groups per pol~mer molecule. Preferably~ the core branches have x dendritic character, most preferably an ordered dendritic character as defined hereinafter. In pxeferred dense star p~l~mers~ the tenminal groups are func~ional groups that ar~ sufficient~y reactive to undergo addltion or subs~itution reactions. Examples of such functional yroups include amino, hydroxy, mercap~o, carboxy, alkenyl, allyl~ vinyl, amido, halo, urea, vxira~yl, aziridinyl, o~azolinyl, imidazolinyl, sNl~onato, phosphonato, isocyanato and isothiocyanato. The dense star polymers ~iffex from co~ven~ional star or s~ar~branched pol~mers in that the dense star polym~rs have a greater concentra- -tion of t~rminal groups per unit of mol~culax volume than do conventional star polymers having an equivalent number of core branches and an eguivalent core branch length.
Thus, the density of terminal groups per unit volume in the dense star polymex is at leas~ 1.5 times the densit.y of terminal groups in the conventional star polymer, 9 3~2'~
.
preferably at least 5 tlmes, more preferably at least lO
times, most preferably fxom 15 to 50 times. The ratio of terminal groups per core branch in the dense polymer is preferably at least 2, more preferably at least 3, most preferably from 4 to 1024. Preferably, for a given polymer molecular weight, the molecular volume of the dense star polymer is no more than 50 volume percent, more preferably from 16 to 50, most prefexably from 7 to 40 volume percent of the molecular volume of the conven-tional star polymer.
I~ the preferred polyamidoamine dense starpolymers, the densi~y of terminal ~primary) amine mol-eties in the polymer is readily expressed as the molar ràtio of primary amine moieties to the total of secondary and tertiary ~mine moieties. In such polymers this 1 amine:(2~amino + 3 amine) is preferably from 0;37:1 to 1.33:1, more preferably from 0.69:1.to 1.2~ ost prefer-ably from 1~1:1 to 1.2:1.
The preferred dendrimers of ~he prese~t inven-tion are charac~erized as having a poly~alent coxe ~hatis covalently bonded to at least two ordered dendritic branche~ which ex~end ~hrough at least two genera~ions.
Such ordered branchi~g can be illustrated by the follo~-ing seguence wherein G indica~es the number of genexa-tions:
~-1 G=2 N~- ._ .N ~
~ }
/ \ ~ N ~tl~N
/ \ ~ \
~ H H H
10~ ~ ~J~L~5;~36' G=3 .N--_~
,~
~ N~ ~ N~, N N N
H EI ~ H H ~
~ athematically, the relationship between ~he nurr~er of tenninal groups on a dendritic branc:h and the nu~ber of generatiorls oX the branch c:an be represented 10 as follo~s-# of texrninal groups = N Gper dendritic branch r ''' wherein G is ~he number o.f gerl~ra:tions and Mr is the repeatirlg unit multiplicity which is a~ leas~ 2 as in :15 the case o:~ amines. The total rlumber of terminAl groups in the dendrimer is determined by the following # of terminal groups = N~ NrG
p~r dendrim~r 2 wherein G and Nr are as defined b~fore and Nc represents 20 the valency ~often called core funtionality) of the core compound. Accordingly, the dendrimers of the preser~t invention ~an }:~e represented in i ts component parts as follow~ ~
fi ~ermin ~Core) ~(Repeat Unit)N G l ~MoietyJ N G
Nr-l 2 wherein the Core, Terminal Moiety, G and Nc are as defined before and the Repeat Unit has a valency or functionality of Nr + 1 wherein Nr is as defi~ed before.
.
An illustration of a fu~ctionally active dehdrimer of a ternary or txivalent core which has three ordered, second genera~ion den~ritic branches is depicted by the followlng configuration:
Z~Z Z~,Z
> b ~ ~ ~
X . I 2 ¦a Z b _ b Z
\~ y - 'Z Z
whexein.I is a ~rivalent coxe atom ox molecule having a covalent bo~d with each of the three dendritic branches, Z is a texminal moiety an~ "a~' and "b" are as defined hereinbefore. An example o~ such a ternary dendrimer is polyamidoamine-represented by the following structura~
foxmula:
~2NY \ / ~ 2 N N
Ib ~2NY \ NY ¦b/ YN
\~ ~
I a E2NY ~ b / \ ~ / YNH2 ~2NY
wherein Y represents a divalent amide moiety such as O . .
-~2CE2CNHC~2CH2 -and "a" and "b" indicate first and second generations, xespectively. In ~hese two illus~rations, Nc is 3 and Nr is 2. In ~he la~ter of th~ two illustra~ions, the ~epeat Unit is YN. While ~he foregoing configuration and formula illustrate a txivale~t core, the core atom or molecule may be any monovalent or monofunc~ional moiety or any polyvalent or polyfunctional moiety, preferably a polyva-lent or polyfunctional moiety having from 2 to 2300 valence bonds or functional sites available for bonding with the dendritic branches, most preferably from 2 to 200 valence bonds or functional sites. In cases wherein ~he core is a monovalent or monofunctional moi~ty, the ` 13~ 5~
dense star has only one core branch and must be compared with a linear polymer in order to determine appropriate terminal group density and molecular volume. Accoxdingly, this dense star must have at least 2 generations in order to exhibit the desired density of terminal groups. Also, Y may be any other divalent organic moiety 5uch as, for example~ alkylene r alkylene oxide, alkyleneamine, wi~h the depicted amide moiety being the most preferred. In addition to amine, the terminal groups of ~he dendrimer may be any ~unc~ionally active moiety that can be used to propagate the dendri~ic branch to ~he next generatio~.
E~amples of such other moieties include carboxy, aziridinyl, oxazolinyl, haloalkyl, oxiranyl, hydroxy and isocyanato, with ~nine or carbo~ylic ester moietie~ being preferred.
While the dendrimexs preferably have dendritic branches having 2 to 6 generations, dendrimers having dendritic branches up to 12 generations are suitably made and employed in the practice of this inve~tion.
More prefer~bly, the amidoamine dendim~rs of -this in~ention are represented by the formula:
~
2~N~ ~-N [C~2CCN~-B-N~Z~
. . 25 ~ R R 2Jn wherein A is a n~v~lent core derived from a nucleophilic compound, R is hydrosen or lower alkyl, B is a divalent moiety capable of linking a~ine groups, n i~ an integer of 3 or more correspondin~ to the number of the core branches and Z is hydrogen or a --14-- ~ z~ 5~
H" Rl ; ClI 2CCNHB~
R ~ Rl wherein Rl is hydrogen or C~ CCNHBN
2, .
.
wherein each generation is repxesented by Rl .
. -C~ CCN~-~-N
2, Rl .
\ /
More preerably A is a.core such as N
~ ~ .
,~ NC~ ~C}~2N o~r `~
~ NC~ ~2NCH2~H2N ;.
R is hydrog~n or methyl; ~ i~ the divalen~ residue of a polyamine, most preferably an alkylene polyamine such as ethylene diamine or a polyalkylene polyamine such as triethylene tetramine; n is an integer from 3 to ~000, more preferably from 3 to 1000, most preferably from 3 to 125, and Z is most preferably ~' .
-15 :~J~5 2CC~NH 2 R
~
C~I2(~cN~lBN(CH2CC~ 2 ~ or E;~ R
~ r ~ ~ 1 -C~CCN~M lC~2CCNHBN( C~2C CNHBN~2 )2 3 .
The dense star polymers of this in~ention are readily prepared by reacting a compound capable of gener- ..
ating a poly~ralent core with a compound or compounds which causes propagation of dendritic branches from ~he 20 coxe. In one method o preparing the~e dendrimers ~herein c~lled the successive exce~s reactant method), it is es~ential to maintain an exc:ess of coreactant to reactive moieties i~ the terminal g::oups in the c:ore, core adduct or subs~s;ruent adducts and dendrimers irl ord~r to prevent : 25 cross-linking and to maintairl the ordered character of the dendritic brarlche~. In general, this excess of coreact~nt to rea~:tive moieties in the terminal groups is . from 2:1 to 12~:1, prefera~ly from 3:1 to 20 1 on a molar basis .
3û Alternatively, ~e compound capable of gener-ating a pol~Talent core, W(X)n, wherein W is the polyva-lent c:ore atom and is covaleIltly bonded to nX reactive terminal groups (n~2 ), is reacted wi~h a par~,ially pro--16~
tected mul~ifunctional reagent, T~U)~m, wherein U repre-sents a multivalent moiety covalently bonded to ~ pro-tected moieties (m>2), and to one T, a moiety capable of rea::ting with X to forrn W[ (X' ~T~ m]n, wherein X and T
represent the residue of reaction between X and X. This first generation compound is then sub; ected to activation conditions whereby 1:he ~3moieties are made r~active (depro-tected ) and reacted with the parkially protected multifunc-tiorlal reagent, T U~, to form the second generation pro-10 tected dendrimer, ~ 3 ~ mT U~7m~n. This protecteddendrimer can be activated arld reacted again in a similar ma~ner to provide the third generation pro~ected de:ndrimer.
Both the successive excess reactant and the partially pro-tected reactant method are specifically illustrated here 15 inafter.
~ ?he successive excess reactant method of pre-paxing ~he dendrimers is illustrated by the preparation of the aforementioned ternary dendritic polyamidoamine~
In ~hi~ me~hod, ammonia, a nucleophilic core compound, is ~0 fir~t reac~ed wi~h methyl acrylate under condition~ suffi-cie~t to cause the Michael addition of one molecule of the ~mmonia to three molecules of the methyl acrylate to form the following core adduct:
'~3C02C~2~ ~CH2CH2~02C~3 25N.
I .
C~2C~2Co2c~3 Following removal of unreacted methyl acrylate, this compound is then reacted with excess ethylenediamine under conditions such that one amine group of the ethyl-` 17 ~ 5~
enediamine molecule reaGts with the methyl carboxylategroups of the core adduct to form a first:generation adduct having three amidoamine moiPties represented by the formula:
S O
N(CH~CH2-CNHC~2CH~N~2)3 The molar excess of e~hyl~ne diamine to methyl acrylate moieties is preferably ~ro~ 4:1 to S0:1. Fol}owing removal o unreacted e-thylenediamin~, this first ge:nera-tion adduct is then reac~ed with excess methyl acrylate under Michael's addition conditions to form a second - generation adduct having terminal methyl ester moieties:
O O
, ~,i ,.
_N[C~2C~2CN~C~2c~2N(CH2 3)2]3 which is then reacted with.excess ethyle~ediamine under amide fo~ming conditions to produce the desired polyamido~
amine dendrimer having ordexed, second generation dendritic branches with terminal amine moie~ies. The molar excess of coreactant to reactive moieties in each case is prefer-: ~bly fro~ o 40:1, most preferably from 3:1 to 1~:1. Similar dendrimers containing amidoamine moi~ti s can be made by using organic amines as the core compound, e.g., ethylenediamine which produces a tetra-branched dendrimer or diethylene~riamine which produces a penta--branched dendrimer.
Other dendrimers made by the successive excess reactant method are polysulfides made by (1) r~acting a ~18~
polythiol, C(CH2SH)4, under basic conclitions with epichlorosulfide to form the first generation polyepisul-fide, c[CH2SCH2C~S ~ 2~4 a~d (2) then reacting this polyepisulfide with hydrogen sulfide to form khe firs~ generation poly~ulfide which can be further reacted with epichlorosul~ide and hydrogen sulfide ~o form ~ubseguent gen~rations. The conditions and pxocedures which may be suitably employed for polysul-fide formation are generally described in Weissberger, , Interscienc~ Publi~hers, N.Y., 605 (1964) and .
Meade et al., J. Chem. Soc., 189~ ~1948~. Polyaminosul-fide dendrimers can be prepared by reacting ammonia or an amine having a pluxality of primary amine groups with an excess of ethylene sulfide.to form a polysulfide and then with excess aziridine to form a first generation - polyaminosulfide which can be reacted with ex~ess e~hyl~
ene sulfide a~d then wi~h excess aziridi~e to form.further generations using general reaction conditions described in USP 2,105,845 and Nat~an et al., ~ ~m Ch- soc , 63, 2361 (1941). The polyeth~r or polysulfide dendrimers can al~o be prepared by the exces~ reactant method by reacting héxahaloben2ene with phenol of ~hiophenol to form a irst generation polyaryle~her or polyarylsulfide and then with excess halogen to form ~he first generation polyhaloaryl-polysulfide and then wi~h further phenol or thiophenol to form further generations according to the procedures and ~0 conditions as described by D. D. MacNicol et al., Tetra-h~de7~ L~Ct~r~, 23, 4131-4 (1982).
-19~ i8~;
Illustrative of the partially protected .reac-tant method, a polyol such as pentaery~hritol, C(CH20H)4, is employed as the polyvalent core genexat.ing compound and is converted to alkali metal salt form, e.g., sodium or 5 lithium, by reaction with alkali metal hydroxide or zero valence alkali metal and then reacted with a molar excess of a partially protected csmpound such as tosylate ester of l-ethyl~4-hydroxymethyl-2,6,7-trioxabicyclo[2,2,2.]oc~
tane to form a protected first generation polyether, ' ~2~
C~CH2ocH2c-c~2o-cc~2cH334 \
~2 which is then activated by reacting with asid such as hydrochloric acid to form the unprotected first genera-~ 2 ~2C[c~20~]3)4 This polyetheris conver~ed to alkali metal salt form by reaction wi~h al~ali metal hydroxide or zero valence alkali metal a~d then reacted with a molar exces~ of the partially p.ro-tected to$ylate ether to form ~he protected second gener-atio~ polyether. The foregoing seguence is repeated as desired for additior~al generation development accordirlg tc) conditio}ls and procedures d~scribed in Endo e~ al., J.
~, Polym. L2tt. Ed., 18, 457 ( 1980 ), Yokoyama e~ al ., ~la , 15, 11-17 ( 198~ ~, and Pedias et al ., 2S Macromolecules, 15, 217-223 ( 1982 ) . These polyether den-drimers are particularly desirable for use in highly alka-line or highly acidic media wherein hydrolysi~ of a poly-amidoamine dendrimer would be unacceptable. As an example of other dendrimers that are suitably prepared by the par-tially protected reactant method, polyamine dendrimers may be prepared by reacting ammo~ia or an amine having a plu-rality of primary amine groups with N-substitute~ az~ri-dine such as N-tosyl aziridine, 20~ 6 S0 N / ¦ 2 .
to form a p~otected first generation polysul~onamide 5 and then activated wi~h acid such as hydrochloric acid to form the first generation polyamine salt and reacted with fux~her N-~osyl aziridine to ~onm the protected sesond generation polysulfonamide which se~uence can be repeated to produce higher generation poly~mines using the general reaction conditions described in ~umrichause, C. P., PhD Thesis from University of Pennsylvania, "N-Sub-stituted Aziridines as Alkylating Agents", Ref. No. 66-10, 624 (1966).
.
In ei~her of the foregoing methods of den-drimer preparation, water or hydrogen sulfide may be employed as nucleophilic cores for ~he production of binary ~endrimers. Examples of other nucleophilic core c~mpounds include phosphine, polyalkylene polyamines such as diethyle~etri~mine, trie~hylenetetramine, tetraethyl-enepent~mine and both linear and branched polyethyleni-mine; primary amiAes such as methylamine, hydroxyethyl-~ine, octadecylamine and polymethylenedi~mines such as hexame~hylenediamine; polyami~oalkylarenes such a~ 1,3,5--tris(aminome~hyl~benze~e; tris(aminoalkyl)amines such as tristaminoe~hyl)amine; heterocyclic amines such as imid aæolines and piperidines; and various other amines such as hydro~yethylaminoethylamine, mercaptoe~hylamine, mor-pholine, piperazine, amino derivatives of polyvinylbenzyl chloride and o~her benzylic polyamines such as tris(l,3,5-3Q -aminomethyl)benzene. Other suitable nucleophilic cores ~ -21- ~J~5~6 include polyols such as the aforementioned pentaerythri~
tol, ethylene glycol and polyalkylene polyols such~as polyethylene glycol and pol~propylene glycol; 1,2-dimer captoethane and polyalkylene pol~nercaptans; thiophenols, and phenols. Of the coxe compounds, ammonia and the polyalkylene polyamines are preferred for th preparation of polyamidoamine dendrimers by the successiYe excess reactant me~hod and the polyols are pre~erred for the preparation of polyether dendrimers by the partially pro~ected reactant method.
Examples of coreactant materials used to react with the nucleophilic core compounds include ethylenically unsaturated carboxylic esters and amides as well as esters, acids and nitriles containing an acrylyl ~oiety such as, for example, methyl acrylate, ethyl acrylate, acrylonitrile, methyl itaconate, dim~thyl fumarates, maleic anhydride, acrylamide, with methyl acry-late being the preerred coreactant material. In gen-eral other preferred unsaturated reac~an~ are volatile or otherwise readily removed from ~he core/coreactant reaction products without deleteriously affecting the reac~ion produc~.
Ex~pIes of the second cQreactant materials used to react with the adduct of the nucleophilic core and the first coreactant include various polyamines such as alkylene polyamines and polyalkylene polyamines such as ethylenediami~e and diethylenetriamine; benzylic polyamines such as tris(1,3,5-aminomethyl)benzene; alka-nolamines such as ethanolamine; and aziridine and deriva-tives ~hereof such as N-aminoethyl aziridine. Of these second coreactan~ ma~erials, the volatile polyamines such as ethylenediamine and die~hylenetriamine are preerred, wi~h ethylenediamine being e~pecially preferred.
-2~ ,L~
Alternatively, the dendrimers can be prepared by reacting an electrophilic core such as a polyester with a coreactant such as a polyamine to form a core add~ct which is then reacted with a suitable second coreactant such as an unsa~urated ester to form ~le first generation polyamidoamine. Thereafter, this first generation prod-uct i5 reacted with a suitable third coreactant such as polyamine and then wi~h th~ second coreacta~t such as unsa~urated ester to form the desired seco~d ge~eration den~rimer. Ex~mples of suitable ele~trophili~ cores include the Cl-C~ alkyl estexs of various polycaxboxylic acids such as benzene ~ricarboxylic acid, oxalic ac:id, terphthalic acid and various other carboxylic acids represented by the formula:
- YtCo~æ
.
wherein Y is hydrocarbyl or a hydrocarbon polyl wherein - the hydrocarbon radical is alkyl, aryl, cycloalkyl, alkyl-ene, arylene, cycloalkylene, and corresponding trivalent, tetravalent, pentavalent and hexavalent radicals of such hydrocarbons; and Z is a whole number from 1 to 6. Pre-ferred el~c~rop~ilic cores include poly(methyl acrylates), poly(acryloyl chloride), poly(methacryloyl chloride~, alkyl acrylateJalkyl methacrylate copolymer~, polymers of alkyl fumarates, and polymers of alkyl itaconates.
Of the electrophilic core~, alkyl acrylate/alkyl meth-acrylate copolym~rs and alkyl acrylate/alkyl itaconate copolymers are most preferred.
Suitable first coreactan-ts for reaction with ~he electrophilic core include polyalkylene polyamines -~2~5~
~23--sus~h as ethylenedia}nine, diethylenetriamine, triethyl-enetetramine and other polyamines represented by the for~
mula:
Rl R2 ~CnH2nN)m~
wherein Rl and R2 independently represent hydrogen or an aikyl, preferably Cl-C4 alkyl, hydroa~alkyl, cyanoalkyl, or amido; n is at least 2 and preferably 2 to 6 arld~ m is 2 ~o 100, preferably 2 to 5. E~amples of suitable second corea t:ants to be used in preparing dendrimers from elec~
trophilic cores include alkyl esters of ethylenically unsa~u~ated carboxylic acids such as methyl acrylate, methyl methacrylate, ethyl acrylate and the like. Exam-ples of suitable t:hird coreactants are thos illustrated for the first coreactan~.
Thus prepared, the derldrimars ~an be reacted with a wide variety of compounds to produce the poly~lmc-tional c:ompolmds having the uniç[u~ characteris~ics that are a~tribu~able to the s~ruc~ure of the dendrim2r. For example, a dendrimer having terminal amine moieties, as in the pol~amidoamine dendrimexr may be reacted with an uns~turated nitrile to yield a polynitrile (~itrile-ter-minated~ dendrimer. Alternatively, ~he polyamidoamine dendrimer may be reac ted with ( 1 ) an ~ ethylenically msaturated amide to form a polyarnide ( amide-terminated) dendrimer, (2) an ~ ethylenically unsa~urated ester to form a polyester (ester-terminated~ dendrimer, (3) an oxi-rane to yield a polyol (hydroxy~terminated) dendrimer, or 58~
(4) an ethylenically unsatuxated sulfide to yield a poly-mercapto (thiol-terminated~ dendrimer. In addition, the dendrimer may be reacted with an appropriate difunctional or trifunctional compound such as an alkyl dihalide or an aromatlc diisocyanate to form a poly(dendrimer) having a plurality of dendrimers linked togethex through the resi-dues of the polyhalide or polyisocyanate. In all instances, such derivatives of the dendrimers are prepared using procedures and co~ditions conventional for carrying out reactions of orga~ic compounds bearing the particular functional group with the parti~ular organic reactant.
Such reactions are further exemplified by the . following working examples. In such working examples, all parts and percentages are by weight unless o-therwise indicated.
~ . `
A. ~
To a one~liter, 3-neck flask equipped with stirrer, condenser and thermowell, and ~ontai~ing methyl acrylate t296.5 g, .3.45 moles) was added at room te~pera-tur~ with stirring over a 6-hour period ammonia (8.7 g, 0.58 mole) dissolved in 102.2 g of ~ethanol. The mixture was allowed to stand at room temperature for 48 hours at which poi~t excess methyl acrylate was removed by vacuum distillat~on (1 mm Hg (130 Pa) at 22C) yielding 156 g Qf residue. .This residue is analyzed ~y size e~clusion chromatography ~ C13 ~ and liguid chromatography . This analysis indicated the coreactant adduc~ to ~e the rqichaells addition product of 1 mole of ammonia and 3 moles of methyl acrylate at a 97.8 percent yield.
3~2,~45~
B. ~ ~ n ~dduct To ethylenediamine (505.8 g, 8.43 moles) dis-solved i.n 215.4 g of me~hanol in a 3 l:iter reaction flask eguipped with stirrer, condenser and thermowell, was S added the aforementioned ammonia/methy:L acrylate adduct ~28.1 g, 0.1022 mole), and ~he reaction mixture was allowed to stand at room temperature for 55 hours. The . resulting mixture (747.6 g) was subjected ~o vacu~n distillation to remove excess ethylenediami~e an methanol at ~ mm ~g ~270 Pa) and 7~C. The residue (35.4 g) was analyzed by size exclusion chromatography and other suitable analytical ~echniques. The analyses indicated that essentially all of the ester moieties of the ammonia/~
me~hyl acrylate adduct had b~en converted to amides in the form of a compound xepresented by the following structural formula:
O
~NC~2C~2N~C~cH2 ~ C~2~2 2 2 2 ., C~2 C=O
N}~
ca2 ~
M~2 thus indicating a yield of 98.6 percent.
~ 6~ 5~
C. Prepaxation of Second Generat:ion Polyester Dendrimer e __ _ To methyl acrylate (93.2 g, 1.084 moles~ in a one-liter flask equipped with condenser, stirrer and thermowell, and heated to 32C was added the aforemen-tioned first generation adduct (1~ g, 0.0501 mole) dis~
- solved in 58.1 g of methanol over 1.5 hours. The xesulting mixture wa6 maintained at 32C for an additional
Such reactions are further exemplified by the . following working examples. In such working examples, all parts and percentages are by weight unless o-therwise indicated.
~ . `
A. ~
To a one~liter, 3-neck flask equipped with stirrer, condenser and thermowell, and ~ontai~ing methyl acrylate t296.5 g, .3.45 moles) was added at room te~pera-tur~ with stirring over a 6-hour period ammonia (8.7 g, 0.58 mole) dissolved in 102.2 g of ~ethanol. The mixture was allowed to stand at room temperature for 48 hours at which poi~t excess methyl acrylate was removed by vacuum distillat~on (1 mm Hg (130 Pa) at 22C) yielding 156 g Qf residue. .This residue is analyzed ~y size e~clusion chromatography ~ C13 ~ and liguid chromatography . This analysis indicated the coreactant adduc~ to ~e the rqichaells addition product of 1 mole of ammonia and 3 moles of methyl acrylate at a 97.8 percent yield.
3~2,~45~
B. ~ ~ n ~dduct To ethylenediamine (505.8 g, 8.43 moles) dis-solved i.n 215.4 g of me~hanol in a 3 l:iter reaction flask eguipped with stirrer, condenser and thermowell, was S added the aforementioned ammonia/methy:L acrylate adduct ~28.1 g, 0.1022 mole), and ~he reaction mixture was allowed to stand at room temperature for 55 hours. The . resulting mixture (747.6 g) was subjected ~o vacu~n distillation to remove excess ethylenediami~e an methanol at ~ mm ~g ~270 Pa) and 7~C. The residue (35.4 g) was analyzed by size exclusion chromatography and other suitable analytical ~echniques. The analyses indicated that essentially all of the ester moieties of the ammonia/~
me~hyl acrylate adduct had b~en converted to amides in the form of a compound xepresented by the following structural formula:
O
~NC~2C~2N~C~cH2 ~ C~2~2 2 2 2 ., C~2 C=O
N}~
ca2 ~
M~2 thus indicating a yield of 98.6 percent.
~ 6~ 5~
C. Prepaxation of Second Generat:ion Polyester Dendrimer e __ _ To methyl acrylate (93.2 g, 1.084 moles~ in a one-liter flask equipped with condenser, stirrer and thermowell, and heated to 32C was added the aforemen-tioned first generation adduct (1~ g, 0.0501 mole) dis~
- solved in 58.1 g of methanol over 1.5 hours. The xesulting mixture wa6 maintained at 32C for an additional
5 hours and allowed to stand an additio~al 18 hour~; at room temper.ature. The reaction mixture (165.7 g~ was stripped of methanol and exces~ methyl acrylate by vacuum distillation (2 mm Hg (27Q Pa) a~d 50~C) to produce 43.1 g of residue. Arlalysis by suitable techrliques indicated ~he product to bP a second generation poly~ster 15 dendrimer represented by the :following foxmula O O
..
lI3~oc~H2c~ 0 ' ~C~2C~2CCH3 .. ..
/ ~HZ~2~CCH2cH N-C~2CH2C~ 2 H3COCC~CH2 ~22 2" 3 , 2 0 ~2 C~2 H2C ~ CH2 ~I2C CH2 ~=C C=~
H3C (~H3 in 98 . 4 percent yield.
~27~ 5~
D. Preparation of Second Generat:ion Polyamine D ~ _ _ To ethylenediamine (328.8 g, 5.48 moles) dissolved in 210.2 g of metha~ol at xoom temperature in the aforementioned flask was added with stirrlng the sec-ond generation polyester dendrimer t34.9 g, 0.0398 mole~
dissolved in 45.3 ~ o~ methanol. The resulting mixtu.re w s allowed ~o stand for 6~ hours at room temperature at which time excess ethylenediamine and methanol was stripped }O from the p~o~uc~ by vacuum distillation (2 mm Hg (270 ~a) - at 72C) to yield 41.1 g ~99.0 percent yield) of product.
This produ~t was determined by size e~clusion chroma-tography to be the second generation polyamine of the aforementioned po.ly~ster dendrimer.
E. Preparation of Third Generation Polyester D ~
To me~hyl acrylate (65.1 g, 0.757 mole) was added the aforementioned second ge~era~ion polyamine dendrimer (28.4 g, 0.0272 mole) dissolved in 84.6 g of methanol over a period of 1 hour and 15 mi~utes. The resulting mixture was allowed ~o s~nd for 18 hours a~
25~ aftex which time excess me~hyl acrylate and methanol were removed by vacuum di~illation (2 mm ~g (270 Pa) at 50C) to yield 56.3 g (100.0 percent yield~ of product residue. Analysis of this residue by suitable analytical tech~igues indicated that it was a third generation polyester den~rimer having 3 core branches with 4 terminal ester moieties per core branch thereby provlding 1 termin~l ester moieties per dendrimer molecule.
28~
F~ Preparation of Third Generation Poly~mine D ~ ~ . _ To ethylenediamine ~437.6 g, 7.29 moles) dis-~olved in 192 g of methanol was added the aforementioned third generatio~ polyester dendrimer ~44.9 g, 0.0216 mole) dissolved in 69.7 g of methanol. The addition occured over a period of 48 hours at 25C with stixring. The resulting xeactio~ mi~ture was then all~wed to s~and for 19 hours at 25C aftex which time excess methanol a.nd -ethylenediamine were removed by vacuum distillatio~ (2 mm Hg ~270 Pa) at 72C) to yield 51.2 g of residual product.
Analysis of this residue indicated a yield of 85.3 percent of a third generation polyamine dendrimer having 3 core branches wi~h ~ terminal primary amine moieties per core branch, thereby providing 12 texminal primary amine moi-eties per molecule of dendrimer. This dendrimer was..cal-culated to ha~e a molecular vol~me between 50,000 and 97,Q00 cubic A (50 and 97 nm3 and a den~ity of a texminal amine moiety between 1 to 3~ 10 4) ~oieties/cubic A ~0.1 and 0.3 moieties/n~3).
ExamPle 2 Foilowing ~he procedure o~ Exam~le 1, except ~hat a molar eguivalent amount of e~hylenediamine was ~ubs~ituted for ammonia as ~he core compound, a third generation polyamine dendrimer is preparedv Upon analysis, it is determined that this dendrimer has four core branches with 4 terminal ~rimary amine moieties per core branch, thereby pro~iding 16 terminal primary amine moieties per molecule of dendrimer. This dendrimer has a molecular volume between 60,000 and 120,000 cubic A (60 and 120 nm3) and a terminal amine densi~y o 2 to 6(x 10 4) amines/cubic A (O.2 and 0.6 amines/nm3).
-29- ~ 8~
Similar dendrimers were obtained when e~uimolar amounts of 1,2-diaminopropane, 1,3-di~inopropane and 1,6-diaminohexane (hexamethylenediamine) were ~ubstituted for the ethylenediamine as the core compound in the foregoing procedure. When an equimola:r amount of dodecyl-amine or benæylamine was substituted for the ethylenedi~
amine as the core compound, the resulting dense star pol~ers had 2 core branches per molecule with 4 terminal primary amine groups per branch, thereby providing a total of 8 primary ami~e groups per pol~mer molecule.
Substitution of triaminoethylami~e for e~hylenediamine as the core compound yielded a dendrimer having 6 core branches with 4 terminal primary amine moieties per core bra~ch, thereby providing 24 terminal primary amine moietie~ per molQcule of dendrimer.
~se~
A. First Amidation Following ~he procedure of Example 1, 5 g (0.0198 mole) of.trimethyl-1,3,5-benæenetrica~boxylate was mixed with 6.3 g (O.036~ mole~ of aminoethylethanol-amine (NH2C~2CH2NHC~2CH2O~) to form a white paste. Thismixture was heated at 120C for 3 hours to form 9.48 g of a light yellow syrup which infrared and nuclear magnetic resona~ce spec~xal analysis indic te was an amidoamine represented by the s~xuctural formula:
O
.
(~N~2CH~NHCH2C~20~)3 1,3,5-isomer ~30- ~ ~ L~
B. First Alk~lation A 9.48 g ~0.0202 mole~ of this amidoamlne was combined with a stoichiometric excess ~11.0 g, 0.127 mole) of methyl acrylate and heated for 24 hours at 80C
whi~h, after devolatiliza~ion, was ~ light yellow.syrup weighing 14.66 g. Nuclear maynetic resona~ce (Hl) and infrared spectral analysis of the syrup indicated that it was a triester represented by the s~ructural formula:
fo ~ C~ 20 . ~' CN~OE[2CE12N~
~ 2CH2COC~3 3 1,3,5-isomer C. Second Am1dation Following the procedure of par~ ~ of this example, the triester (4.57 g, 6.3 ~ 10 3 mole) produced in part B was mixe~ with 1.96 g (1.8g x 10 2 mole) of aminoethylethanolamine and heated at 90C for 48 hours to form 5.8 g Qf a ligh~ yellow, highly viscous syrup.
Analysis of this product by nuclear magnetic resonance (~1) (~MSO~d~) and in~raxed spectroscopy indicated th t it was triamidoamine represented by ~he structural formula:
~O ~ C~C~20~ ~
-3~- ~ 2 wherein each A is individually ~ CH2(~20H
~N \ or N~CH2CH2NHCH2 2 .
S Ex~ple_4 A. First Amidation A 27~3-g portion (0.1 mole~ of a triester represen~ed by the formula:
O
~C~2cHcocH3) was mixed with 30 g (0.405 mole) of N~methyl ethylene-diamine ~ME~A) and 16.6 g of methanol and then hea~ed at 63C for 11 hour~. The product was then stripped of unreacted NEDA and methanol to yield 3G.l g of a triamide represented by the formula:
., ' N~C~2~a~CN~CH2CH2NHCH3)3 .
B. ~lrst Alk~latlon Tv ~he aforementioned triamide (36.1 g, 0.0~
mole3 was added 38.5 g of me~hanol to yield a clear solu-tion to which was added 50.5 g (0.59 mole) of methyl acrylate dropwise over a period of 2 hours at 38C. The temperatllre of the resulting mi~ture was increased to ~32~ 5~
53C for 5 additional hours after which unreacted methyl acrylate and methanol were removed under vacuum to yield 61 g of a light yellow syrup. Analysis of this product by nuclear magnetic resonance (Hl) spectroscopy indicated that it is represented by the formula:
/ o ~ C~3 N~cH2cH2~N~c~2c~2N
~ CH2C~coc~3 J 3 C. Second Amidation To 60.8 g of the aforementioned first alkyla-tion product were added with stirring 42.7 g of methanol I5 and 26.6 g (OO359 mole~ of MEDA followed by heating the resulting mixture at 65C for 6 hour~. Vacuum stripping of the mixture yielded 72.7 g of a light yellow syrup.
Analysis of this product (syrup) indica~ed that it was a mix~ure of i~omers having the following structures:
~0 / O ~CH3 N~CH2CH2CN~CH2CH2N~ O ~C~3 ~ CH2C~2CN~CH2C~2N
~ 3 O E~
o ~ 2CR2CNE~CH2CH
N~CH2CH2C N,CH2CH2N~ . H
CE12~I2~ 2CH2 ~ ~
~ 3 D. Second Alkylation and Third_Amidation Alkylation of the aforementioned second ami-dation product with methyl acrylate and then amidation of the resulting alkylated product with ~DA in accordance with aforementioned procedures yielded a mixture of isomers having core branches with dendritir character~
lSl:iCS .
Demulsification Method To 100 ml of an oil-in water emulsion con- -taining about 5 percent of crude oil having a specific~ravity of ~0.98 g/ml was added one part per million -base~ on the emulsion of the dendrimer (ethylene diamine core) of Example 2. The emulsion was then shaken fo.r 3 minutes to effectively disperse the dendrimer into the emulsion. The emulsion was allowed to ~tand for 10 mi~utes and visually evaluated~ ~ter 10 minutes, the emulsion appeared to be completely resolved into two pha e~ having a distinct interface wherein the aqueous phase was essentially transparent.
Following the foregoing procedure except sub-stitutins a guate~nized form of th~ foregoing dendximer ~ox the den~rimer, ~he emulsion was si~ilarly resolved using 0.5 ppm and 1 ppm of th~ qua~ernized form. This quaterniz~ orm was prepared by reacting ~he 32.42 g ~O.01 mole) of the den~rimer in 100 ml of methanol with 24.32 g (0.16 mole) of 2-hydro~y-3-~hloropropyl trimethyl ammonium chloride in 30 ml of water at 50C for 12 hours.
..
lI3~oc~H2c~ 0 ' ~C~2C~2CCH3 .. ..
/ ~HZ~2~CCH2cH N-C~2CH2C~ 2 H3COCC~CH2 ~22 2" 3 , 2 0 ~2 C~2 H2C ~ CH2 ~I2C CH2 ~=C C=~
H3C (~H3 in 98 . 4 percent yield.
~27~ 5~
D. Preparation of Second Generat:ion Polyamine D ~ _ _ To ethylenediamine (328.8 g, 5.48 moles) dissolved in 210.2 g of metha~ol at xoom temperature in the aforementioned flask was added with stirrlng the sec-ond generation polyester dendrimer t34.9 g, 0.0398 mole~
dissolved in 45.3 ~ o~ methanol. The resulting mixtu.re w s allowed ~o stand for 6~ hours at room temperature at which time excess ethylenediamine and methanol was stripped }O from the p~o~uc~ by vacuum distillation (2 mm Hg (270 ~a) - at 72C) to yield 41.1 g ~99.0 percent yield) of product.
This produ~t was determined by size e~clusion chroma-tography to be the second generation polyamine of the aforementioned po.ly~ster dendrimer.
E. Preparation of Third Generation Polyester D ~
To me~hyl acrylate (65.1 g, 0.757 mole) was added the aforementioned second ge~era~ion polyamine dendrimer (28.4 g, 0.0272 mole) dissolved in 84.6 g of methanol over a period of 1 hour and 15 mi~utes. The resulting mixture was allowed ~o s~nd for 18 hours a~
25~ aftex which time excess me~hyl acrylate and methanol were removed by vacuum di~illation (2 mm ~g (270 Pa) at 50C) to yield 56.3 g (100.0 percent yield~ of product residue. Analysis of this residue by suitable analytical tech~igues indicated that it was a third generation polyester den~rimer having 3 core branches with 4 terminal ester moieties per core branch thereby provlding 1 termin~l ester moieties per dendrimer molecule.
28~
F~ Preparation of Third Generation Poly~mine D ~ ~ . _ To ethylenediamine ~437.6 g, 7.29 moles) dis-~olved in 192 g of methanol was added the aforementioned third generatio~ polyester dendrimer ~44.9 g, 0.0216 mole) dissolved in 69.7 g of methanol. The addition occured over a period of 48 hours at 25C with stixring. The resulting xeactio~ mi~ture was then all~wed to s~and for 19 hours at 25C aftex which time excess methanol a.nd -ethylenediamine were removed by vacuum distillatio~ (2 mm Hg ~270 Pa) at 72C) to yield 51.2 g of residual product.
Analysis of this residue indicated a yield of 85.3 percent of a third generation polyamine dendrimer having 3 core branches wi~h ~ terminal primary amine moieties per core branch, thereby providing 12 texminal primary amine moi-eties per molecule of dendrimer. This dendrimer was..cal-culated to ha~e a molecular vol~me between 50,000 and 97,Q00 cubic A (50 and 97 nm3 and a den~ity of a texminal amine moiety between 1 to 3~ 10 4) ~oieties/cubic A ~0.1 and 0.3 moieties/n~3).
ExamPle 2 Foilowing ~he procedure o~ Exam~le 1, except ~hat a molar eguivalent amount of e~hylenediamine was ~ubs~ituted for ammonia as ~he core compound, a third generation polyamine dendrimer is preparedv Upon analysis, it is determined that this dendrimer has four core branches with 4 terminal ~rimary amine moieties per core branch, thereby pro~iding 16 terminal primary amine moieties per molecule of dendrimer. This dendrimer has a molecular volume between 60,000 and 120,000 cubic A (60 and 120 nm3) and a terminal amine densi~y o 2 to 6(x 10 4) amines/cubic A (O.2 and 0.6 amines/nm3).
-29- ~ 8~
Similar dendrimers were obtained when e~uimolar amounts of 1,2-diaminopropane, 1,3-di~inopropane and 1,6-diaminohexane (hexamethylenediamine) were ~ubstituted for the ethylenediamine as the core compound in the foregoing procedure. When an equimola:r amount of dodecyl-amine or benæylamine was substituted for the ethylenedi~
amine as the core compound, the resulting dense star pol~ers had 2 core branches per molecule with 4 terminal primary amine groups per branch, thereby providing a total of 8 primary ami~e groups per pol~mer molecule.
Substitution of triaminoethylami~e for e~hylenediamine as the core compound yielded a dendrimer having 6 core branches with 4 terminal primary amine moieties per core bra~ch, thereby providing 24 terminal primary amine moietie~ per molQcule of dendrimer.
~se~
A. First Amidation Following ~he procedure of Example 1, 5 g (0.0198 mole) of.trimethyl-1,3,5-benæenetrica~boxylate was mixed with 6.3 g (O.036~ mole~ of aminoethylethanol-amine (NH2C~2CH2NHC~2CH2O~) to form a white paste. Thismixture was heated at 120C for 3 hours to form 9.48 g of a light yellow syrup which infrared and nuclear magnetic resona~ce spec~xal analysis indic te was an amidoamine represented by the s~xuctural formula:
O
.
(~N~2CH~NHCH2C~20~)3 1,3,5-isomer ~30- ~ ~ L~
B. First Alk~lation A 9.48 g ~0.0202 mole~ of this amidoamlne was combined with a stoichiometric excess ~11.0 g, 0.127 mole) of methyl acrylate and heated for 24 hours at 80C
whi~h, after devolatiliza~ion, was ~ light yellow.syrup weighing 14.66 g. Nuclear maynetic resona~ce (Hl) and infrared spectral analysis of the syrup indicated that it was a triester represented by the s~ructural formula:
fo ~ C~ 20 . ~' CN~OE[2CE12N~
~ 2CH2COC~3 3 1,3,5-isomer C. Second Am1dation Following the procedure of par~ ~ of this example, the triester (4.57 g, 6.3 ~ 10 3 mole) produced in part B was mixe~ with 1.96 g (1.8g x 10 2 mole) of aminoethylethanolamine and heated at 90C for 48 hours to form 5.8 g Qf a ligh~ yellow, highly viscous syrup.
Analysis of this product by nuclear magnetic resonance (~1) (~MSO~d~) and in~raxed spectroscopy indicated th t it was triamidoamine represented by ~he structural formula:
~O ~ C~C~20~ ~
-3~- ~ 2 wherein each A is individually ~ CH2(~20H
~N \ or N~CH2CH2NHCH2 2 .
S Ex~ple_4 A. First Amidation A 27~3-g portion (0.1 mole~ of a triester represen~ed by the formula:
O
~C~2cHcocH3) was mixed with 30 g (0.405 mole) of N~methyl ethylene-diamine ~ME~A) and 16.6 g of methanol and then hea~ed at 63C for 11 hour~. The product was then stripped of unreacted NEDA and methanol to yield 3G.l g of a triamide represented by the formula:
., ' N~C~2~a~CN~CH2CH2NHCH3)3 .
B. ~lrst Alk~latlon Tv ~he aforementioned triamide (36.1 g, 0.0~
mole3 was added 38.5 g of me~hanol to yield a clear solu-tion to which was added 50.5 g (0.59 mole) of methyl acrylate dropwise over a period of 2 hours at 38C. The temperatllre of the resulting mi~ture was increased to ~32~ 5~
53C for 5 additional hours after which unreacted methyl acrylate and methanol were removed under vacuum to yield 61 g of a light yellow syrup. Analysis of this product by nuclear magnetic resonance (Hl) spectroscopy indicated that it is represented by the formula:
/ o ~ C~3 N~cH2cH2~N~c~2c~2N
~ CH2C~coc~3 J 3 C. Second Amidation To 60.8 g of the aforementioned first alkyla-tion product were added with stirring 42.7 g of methanol I5 and 26.6 g (OO359 mole~ of MEDA followed by heating the resulting mixture at 65C for 6 hour~. Vacuum stripping of the mixture yielded 72.7 g of a light yellow syrup.
Analysis of this product (syrup) indica~ed that it was a mix~ure of i~omers having the following structures:
~0 / O ~CH3 N~CH2CH2CN~CH2CH2N~ O ~C~3 ~ CH2C~2CN~CH2C~2N
~ 3 O E~
o ~ 2CR2CNE~CH2CH
N~CH2CH2C N,CH2CH2N~ . H
CE12~I2~ 2CH2 ~ ~
~ 3 D. Second Alkylation and Third_Amidation Alkylation of the aforementioned second ami-dation product with methyl acrylate and then amidation of the resulting alkylated product with ~DA in accordance with aforementioned procedures yielded a mixture of isomers having core branches with dendritir character~
lSl:iCS .
Demulsification Method To 100 ml of an oil-in water emulsion con- -taining about 5 percent of crude oil having a specific~ravity of ~0.98 g/ml was added one part per million -base~ on the emulsion of the dendrimer (ethylene diamine core) of Example 2. The emulsion was then shaken fo.r 3 minutes to effectively disperse the dendrimer into the emulsion. The emulsion was allowed to ~tand for 10 mi~utes and visually evaluated~ ~ter 10 minutes, the emulsion appeared to be completely resolved into two pha e~ having a distinct interface wherein the aqueous phase was essentially transparent.
Following the foregoing procedure except sub-stitutins a guate~nized form of th~ foregoing dendximer ~ox the den~rimer, ~he emulsion was si~ilarly resolved using 0.5 ppm and 1 ppm of th~ qua~ernized form. This quaterniz~ orm was prepared by reacting ~he 32.42 g ~O.01 mole) of the den~rimer in 100 ml of methanol with 24.32 g (0.16 mole) of 2-hydro~y-3-~hloropropyl trimethyl ammonium chloride in 30 ml of water at 50C for 12 hours.
Claims (11)
PROPERTY OR PRIVILEGE IS CLAIMED ARE DEFINED AS FOLLOWS:
1. A star polymer having at least two core branchs emanating from a core, each core branch having at least one terminal group provided that (1) the ratio of terminal groups to the core branches is two or greater, (2) the density of terminal groups per unit volume in the polymer is at least 1.5 times that of a conventional star polymer having similar core and monomeric moieties and a comparable molecular weight and number of core branches, each of such branches of the conventional star polymer bearing only one terminal group, and (3) a molecular volume that is no more than 60 percent of the molecular volume of said conventional star polymer.
2. The star polymer of Claim 1 having (1) at least 2 core branches per core, (2) a terminal group density at least 5 times that of the corresponding conven-tional star polymer, (3) a molecular volume that is no more than 50 percent of the volume of the conventional star polymer, and (4) a ratio of terminal groups to core branches is 2:1 or more.
3. The polymer of Claim 1 which is a den-drimer having a polyvalent core that is covalently bonded to at least 1 ordered dendritic branch which extends to two generations such that each dendritic branch has at least four terminal groups and a sym-metrical structure.
4. The polymer of Claim 1 wherein the den-dritic branches contain amidoamine linkages.
5. The polymer of Claim 1 wherein the core is derived from a nucleophilic compound and the branches are polyamidoamines wherein the terminal groups are primary amine groups.
6. The polymer of Claim 1 wherein the nucleo-philic core is derived from a core compound having a plu-rality of active hydrogens capable of undergoing a Michael's addition reaction with an ethylenically unsaturated group.
7. The polymer of Claim 5 wherein the nucleo-philic compound is an amine having a plurality of amine hydrogens.
8. The polymer of Claim 5 wherein the branches are polyamidoamine which is derived from the reaction of an alkyl ester of an .alpha.,.beta.-ethylenically unsaturated carboxylic acid or an .alpha.,.beta.-ethylenically unsaturated amide and an alkylene polyamine or a poly-alkylene polyamine.
9. The polymer of Claim a wherein the nucleo-philic compound is ammonia, the ester is methyl acrylate and the polyamine is ethylenediamine.
10. A process for producing the dense star polymer of Claim 1 comprising the steps of:
(A) contacting (1) a core compound having at least one nucleophilic or one electro-philic moiety (N/E moieties) with (2) an excess of a first organic coreactant having (a) one core reactive moiety which is reactive.
with the N/E moieties of the core compound, and (b) an N/E
moiety which does not react with the N/E moiety of the core under conditions sufficient to form a core adduct wherein each N/E
moiety of the core compound has reacted with the core reactive moiety of a different molecule of the first coreactant;
(B) contacting (1) the core adduct having at least twice the number of N/E moieties as the core compound with (2) an excess of a second organic coreactant having (a) one adduct reactive moiety which will react with the N/E moieties of the core adduct and ( b ) a N/E
moiety which does not react with the N/E moiety of the core adduct under conditions sufficient to form a first generation adduct having a number of N/E
moieties that are at least twice the number of N/E moieties in the core adduct; and (C) contacting the first generation adduct with an excess of a third organic coreactant having one moiety that is reactive with the N/E moieties of the first generation adduct and an N/E moiety that does not react with the N/E moieties of the first genera-tion adduct under conditions sufficient to form a second generation dendrimer, wherein the first coreactant differs from the second coreactant, and the second coreactant differs from the third coreactant, but the first and third coreactant may be the same or different compounds.
(A) contacting (1) a core compound having at least one nucleophilic or one electro-philic moiety (N/E moieties) with (2) an excess of a first organic coreactant having (a) one core reactive moiety which is reactive.
with the N/E moieties of the core compound, and (b) an N/E
moiety which does not react with the N/E moiety of the core under conditions sufficient to form a core adduct wherein each N/E
moiety of the core compound has reacted with the core reactive moiety of a different molecule of the first coreactant;
(B) contacting (1) the core adduct having at least twice the number of N/E moieties as the core compound with (2) an excess of a second organic coreactant having (a) one adduct reactive moiety which will react with the N/E moieties of the core adduct and ( b ) a N/E
moiety which does not react with the N/E moiety of the core adduct under conditions sufficient to form a first generation adduct having a number of N/E
moieties that are at least twice the number of N/E moieties in the core adduct; and (C) contacting the first generation adduct with an excess of a third organic coreactant having one moiety that is reactive with the N/E moieties of the first generation adduct and an N/E moiety that does not react with the N/E moieties of the first genera-tion adduct under conditions sufficient to form a second generation dendrimer, wherein the first coreactant differs from the second coreactant, and the second coreactant differs from the third coreactant, but the first and third coreactant may be the same or different compounds.
11. A star polymer having at least two essentially symmetrical core branches emanating from a core, each core branch having at least one terminal group provided that (1) the ratio of terminal groups to the core branches is two or greater, (2) the density of terminal groups per unit volume in the polymer is at least 1.5 times that of a conventional star polymer having similar core and monomeric moieties and a comparable molecular weight and number of core branches, each of such branches of the conventional star polymer bearing only one terminal group, and (3) the molecular volume is not more than 60 percent of the molecular volume of said conventional star polymer.
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US456,226 | 1983-01-07 | ||
US06/456,226 US4507466A (en) | 1983-01-07 | 1983-01-07 | Dense star polymers having core, core branches, terminal groups |
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EP (3) | EP0671429B1 (en) |
JP (2) | JPH0670132B2 (en) |
AT (3) | ATE179731T1 (en) |
AU (1) | AU560604B2 (en) |
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- 1983-12-29 AU AU24354/84A patent/AU560604B2/en not_active Expired
- 1983-12-29 BR BR8307680A patent/BR8307680A/en not_active IP Right Cessation
- 1983-12-29 JP JP59500653A patent/JPH0670132B2/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 1983-12-29 WO PCT/US1983/002052 patent/WO1984002705A1/en unknown
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1984
- 1984-01-05 AT AT95105140T patent/ATE179731T1/en not_active IP Right Cessation
- 1984-01-05 DE DE3486372T patent/DE3486372T2/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1984-01-05 DE DE3486490T patent/DE3486490T2/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1984-01-05 EP EP95105140A patent/EP0671429B1/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1984-01-05 DE DE0671429T patent/DE671429T1/en active Pending
- 1984-01-05 EP EP84100080A patent/EP0115771B1/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1984-01-05 AT AT94102257T patent/ATE203039T1/en not_active IP Right Cessation
- 1984-01-05 AT AT84100080T patent/ATE119177T1/en not_active IP Right Cessation
- 1984-01-05 NZ NZ206742A patent/NZ206742A/en unknown
- 1984-01-05 DE DE0608908T patent/DE608908T1/en active Pending
- 1984-01-05 EP EP94102257A patent/EP0608908B1/en not_active Revoked
- 1984-01-05 DE DE3486473T patent/DE3486473T2/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1984-01-06 ZA ZA84128A patent/ZA84128B/en unknown
- 1984-01-06 MX MX199974A patent/MX163770B/en unknown
- 1984-01-06 CA CA000444868A patent/CA1244586A/en not_active Expired
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1993
- 1993-05-24 JP JP5144319A patent/JPH0742352B2/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
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DE3486490T2 (en) | 2001-10-31 |
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EP0608908A3 (en) | 1995-03-29 |
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MX163770B (en) | 1992-06-19 |
ZA84128B (en) | 1985-08-28 |
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DE3486473D1 (en) | 1999-06-10 |
JPH0670132B2 (en) | 1994-09-07 |
EP0671429B1 (en) | 1999-05-06 |
JPH0693097A (en) | 1994-04-05 |
BR8307680A (en) | 1984-12-11 |
ATE179731T1 (en) | 1999-05-15 |
AU560604B2 (en) | 1987-04-09 |
EP0671429A1 (en) | 1995-09-13 |
EP0115771A3 (en) | 1987-03-11 |
DE3486372D1 (en) | 1995-04-06 |
AU2435484A (en) | 1984-08-02 |
JPS60500295A (en) | 1985-03-07 |
DE671429T1 (en) | 1996-02-15 |
DE3486490D1 (en) | 2001-08-16 |
US4507466A (en) | 1985-03-26 |
JPH0742352B2 (en) | 1995-05-10 |
NZ206742A (en) | 1987-04-30 |
EP0608908B1 (en) | 2001-07-11 |
EP0115771B1 (en) | 1995-03-01 |
ATE119177T1 (en) | 1995-03-15 |
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