WO1997031031A1 - Branched polymer synthesis - Google Patents

Branched polymer synthesis Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1997031031A1
WO1997031031A1 PCT/US1997/002913 US9702913W WO9731031A1 WO 1997031031 A1 WO1997031031 A1 WO 1997031031A1 US 9702913 W US9702913 W US 9702913W WO 9731031 A1 WO9731031 A1 WO 9731031A1
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Prior art keywords
substituted
group
halogen
unsubstituted
aryl
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1997/002913
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Lech Wilczek
Elizabeth Forrester Mccord
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E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company
Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organization
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Publication date
Application filed by E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company, Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organization filed Critical E.I. Du Pont De Nemours And Company
Priority to AU19735/97A priority Critical patent/AU713497B2/en
Priority to DE69725557T priority patent/DE69725557T2/en
Priority to IL14565097A priority patent/IL145650A0/en
Priority to EP97907839A priority patent/EP0882071B1/en
Priority to BR9707655A priority patent/BR9707655A/en
Priority to DK97907839T priority patent/DK0882071T3/en
Priority to US09/125,466 priority patent/US6100350A/en
Priority to NZ331313A priority patent/NZ331313A/en
Priority to IL12587697A priority patent/IL125876A/en
Priority to JP53039097A priority patent/JP3651905B2/en
Publication of WO1997031031A1 publication Critical patent/WO1997031031A1/en

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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08GMACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS OBTAINED OTHERWISE THAN BY REACTIONS ONLY INVOLVING UNSATURATED CARBON-TO-CARBON BONDS
    • C08G83/00Macromolecular compounds not provided for in groups C08G2/00 - C08G81/00
    • C08G83/002Dendritic macromolecules
    • C08G83/003Dendrimers
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08FMACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS OBTAINED BY REACTIONS ONLY INVOLVING CARBON-TO-CARBON UNSATURATED BONDS
    • C08F2/00Processes of polymerisation
    • C08F2/38Polymerisation using regulators, e.g. chain terminating agents, e.g. telomerisation
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C08ORGANIC MACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS; THEIR PREPARATION OR CHEMICAL WORKING-UP; COMPOSITIONS BASED THEREON
    • C08FMACROMOLECULAR COMPOUNDS OBTAINED BY REACTIONS ONLY INVOLVING CARBON-TO-CARBON UNSATURATED BONDS
    • C08F290/00Macromolecular compounds obtained by polymerising monomers on to polymers modified by introduction of aliphatic unsaturated end or side groups
    • C08F290/02Macromolecular compounds obtained by polymerising monomers on to polymers modified by introduction of aliphatic unsaturated end or side groups on to polymers modified by introduction of unsaturated end groups
    • C08F290/04Polymers provided for in subclasses C08C or C08F

Definitions

  • terminally functional branched polymers appear to be ultimate reactive substrates for networks, because the branch points can substitute for a significant portion of expensive reactive groups and provide a better controll of the reactive groups distribution.
  • Particularly polymers having large numbers of short branches below critical molecular weight are unlikely to form any entanglements and should exhibit low inherent viscosity and good flow even in concentrated solutions.
  • branched polymers Conventional techniques for sythesizing well defined branched polymers require expensive multistep processes involving isolation of reactive intermediate macromonomers.
  • the macromonomers have polymerizable end groups, which are usually introduced using functional initiator, terminating or chain transfer agent.
  • Well defined branched polymers are prepared by the macromonomer homopolymerization or copolymerization with suitable low molecular weight comonomer selected based on known reactivity ratios.
  • references cited above cover the copolyme ⁇ zation of vinyl monomers in the presence of chain transfer reagents, but do not disclose synthetic conditions for production of macromonomers or polymers containing branches upon branches.
  • This invention relates to a general process for the synthesis of addition polymers containing branches upon branches and having a polymerizable olefin end group by a convenient one-pot polymerization of selected vinyl monomers with chain polymerization initiators and a method to provide olefin end groups by chain transfer or termination agents.
  • the polymerization is carried out in such a manner that chain transfer occurs frequently and each chain transfer event terminates that particular polymer chain with terminal polymerizable olefinic functionality. Subsequent reincorporation of the polymer chains produced early in the reaction leads to branching of subsequently-formed polymer chains which are terminated with polymerizable olefinic functionality.
  • This invention concerns an improved process for the free-radical polymerization of at least one unsaturated vinylic monomer to form a polymer whose molecular architecture includes branches upon branches and a
  • polymerizable vinyl-terminated end group comprising contacting, in the presence of a free-radical initiator:
  • Y is selected from the group consisting of OR, O 2 CR, halogen, CO 2 H, COR, CO 2 R, CN, CONH 2 , CONHR, CONR 2 and R';
  • Z is selected H, CH 3 , or CH 2 OH
  • R is selected from the group consisting of substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, substituted and unsubstituted aryl, substituted and unsubstituted heteroaryl, substituted and unsubstituted aralkyl, substituted and unsubstituted alkaryl, and substituted and unsubstituted organosilyl, the substituents being the same or different and selected from the group consisting of carboxylic acid, carboxylic ester, epoxy, hydroxyl, alkoxy, primary amino, secondary amino, tertiary amino, isocyanato, sulfonic acid and halogen, and the number of carbons in said alkyl groups is from 1 to 12; and
  • R' is selected from the aromatic group consisting of substituted and unsubstituted aryl, substituted and unsubstituted heteroaryl, the substituents being the same or different and selected from the group consisting of carboxylic acid, carboxylic ester, epoxy, hydroxyl, alkoxy, primary amino, secondary amino, tertiary amino, isocyanato, sulfonic acid, substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, substituted and unsubstituted aryl, substituted and unsubstituted olefin and halogen;
  • X is selected from -(CUY-CH 2 ) n -Z', S(O)R, S(O) 2 R, SnR 3 , halogen, R 2 and R 3 ;
  • U is selected from H and R;
  • Q is selected from Y, or in the case where X is halogen, Y and H;
  • Z' is selected from H, SR 1 , S(O)R, S(O) 2 R, R 2 and R 3 ;
  • n is ⁇ 1;
  • R is selected from the group substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, aryl. aralkyl, alkaryl and organosilicon groups wherein the substituent(s) are independently from the group carboxyl, epoxy, hydroxyl, alkoxy, amino and halogen;
  • R 1 is selected from the group H, substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, aryl, aralkyl, alkaryl and organosilicon groups wherein the substituent(s) are independently from the group carboxyl, epoxy, hydroxyl, alkoxy, amino and halogen;
  • R 2 is selected from the group free radical initiator-derived fragments of substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, cycloalkyl, aryl, aralkyl, alkaryl, organosilyl, alkoxyalkyl, alkoxyaryl, sulfate groups wherein the substituent(s) are
  • R 3 is selected from the group free radical initiator-derived fragments of substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, cycloalkyl, aryl, aralkyl, alkaryl, organosilyl, alkoxyalkyl, alkoxyaryl, and P(O)R 2 groups wherein the substituent(s) are independently selected from R, OR 1 , O 2 CR, halogen, CO 2 H and salts thereof, CO 2 R, CN, CONH 2 , CO 2 NHR, CONR 2 ;
  • the improvement comprises obtaining higher yields of polymer having the branch-upon-branch architecture and polymerizable vinylic chain termini, and a higher density of branches upon branches in that polymer by optimizing the polymerization in the following way: select step III and at least one of I; II; I and IV; and II and IV from steps:
  • B" X, B', H, CH 3 , CH 2 CHR 1 CH 3 , or CH 2 CMeR 2 CH 3 ,
  • X, Y, Z, R 1 and R 2 are as earlier defined.
  • VR- 110 2,2'-azobis(2,4,4-trimethyIpentane) (Wako Pure Chemical Industries,
  • CH 2 CQ-CH 2 -X
  • organic chain transfer reagents include allylic sulfides, sulfones, bromides, phosphonates, stannanes, vinylidene terminated methacrylic oligomers, a-methyl styrene dimer and related compounds.
  • Preferred chain transfer agents and polymerizable intermediate macromonomers exhibit dual reactivity, in that they can both undergo copolymerization or homopolymerization as well as promote competitive chain transfer through the addition-elimination process.
  • Substituent Q of the chain transfer reagent is chosen to convey the appropriate reactivity of the olefinic group in radical polymerization of the desired monomer(s) under polymerization conditions.
  • the substituents Q and X can also be chosen so as to introduce any required end-group functionality into the polymer. Therefore using functional chain transfer agent (iii) can be a prefered method.
  • These end groups can be the same or different and can be chosen such that the final polymer can be telechelic. Suitable end groups are particularly those compatible with free radical polymerization and include epoxy, hydroxyl, carboxyl, silyl.
  • the process can be potentially conducted by bulk, solution, suspension or emulsion polymerization using batch or preferably starved feed reactor, which offers better process control.
  • the treelike branched polymers are formed by in situ generation and copolymerization of first linear and subsequently increasingly branched macromonomers through the polymerizable olefin group.
  • the method was demonstrated by model kinetic studies of monomer, chain transfer agent (CTA) conversions, polymer molecular weight increase combined with quantitative end group and branching characterization when reacting vinylidene MMA-trimer used as a CTA and butyl acrylate (B A) in a starved-feed reactor.
  • Macromolecules typically with 2 to 30 branches each containing 5 to 20 monomers were prepared, branch length being primarily controlled by the monomer/chain transfer agent ratio, conversion and to some extend by temperature.
  • a chain polymerization is controlled by a chain transfer step so as to provide a polymerizable olefin end group (Scheme 1).
  • the branch-upon-branch structure is built by in situ generation and copolymerization of linear and subsequently increasingly branched macromonomers through the polymerizable olefin group.
  • That monomer copolymerizability is primarily determined by the steric and electronic properties is well documented in the art.
  • the chain process can involve either one or several different comonomers.
  • Typical monomers include acrylates, methacrylates, acrylonitrile, methacrylonitrile, acrylamide,
  • methacrylamide styrene, a-methylstyrene, halogenated olefins, vinyl esters, but also can include N-vinyl carbazole, N-vinyl pyrrolidone,and dienes such as isoprene, and chloroprene.
  • Quantitative NMR analysis of the products, particularly end group structure and branching, combined with oligomer analysis by MALDI mass spectroscopy show that conventional radical termination and chain transfer processes can be effectively suppressed under these conditions, when acrylates (or styrene) are copolymerized with the vinylidene macromonomer/chain transfer agent .
  • the polymer molecular weight and end group structure are predominantly controlled by the ⁇ -scission chain transfer.
  • High conversions (usually 80-90 %) of the vinylidene end group are predominantly achieved by the incorporation, i.e., copolymerization leading to branches.
  • the data are consistent with a mechanism, in which the initially formed branched macromolecules receive predominantly the vinylidene end group through the ⁇ -scission chain transfer. Having a reactive vinylidene end group allows the singly-branched macromolecules to participate in analogous subsequent (secondary) copolymerization steps leading eventually to even more branched structures, which could be called branch-upon-branch polymers.
  • MMA vinylidene
  • Branching density estimated from the ratio of grafting to ⁇ -scission is primarily determined by the BA/chain transfer agent ratio, conversion and to some extend by temperature in the range 60 to 100 °C. Under standard conditions, one MMA-trimer branch occurs per 8 to 16 BA comonomers consumed, which corresponds to 1000 - 2,000 molecular weight of BA segment per one branch and is desirably below an entanglement length.
  • the copolymers were characterized by 1 H and 13 C NMR , by conventional SEC using RI detector vs. PMMA standards and compared with data obtained using universal calibration in THF and the light-scattering weight-average molecular weights. Under typical radical copolymerization conditions in starved feed reactor used in these studies, about a 10-fold molar excess of acrylate comonomer over methacrylate vinylidene macromonomer is required to achieve acceptable yield (> 10 %) and a significant number (>5) of branches per macromolecule. The number of 5 branches per molecule is a minimum (per definition) for branch-upon-branch structures.
  • Preferred monomers are:
  • trimethoxysilylpropyl acrylate trimethoxysilylpropyl acrylate, triethoxysilylpropyl acrylate, tributoxysilylpropyl acrylate, dimethoxymethvlsilylpropyl acrylate, diethoxymethylsilylpropyl acrylate, dibutoxymethylsilylpropyl acrylate, diisopropoxymethylsilylpropyl acrylate, dimethoxysilylpropyl acrylate, diethoxysilylpropyl acrylate, dibutoxysilylpropyl acrylate, diisopropoxysilylpropyl acrylate, vinyl acetate,
  • trimethoxysilylpropyl methacrylate trimethoxysilylpropyl methacrylate, triethoxysilylpropyl methacrylate, tributoxysilylpropyl methacrylate,
  • dimethoxymethylsilylpropyl methacrylate diethoxymethyl-silylpropylmethacrylate, dibutoxymethylsilylpropyl methacrylate, diisopropoxymethylsilylpropyl methacrylate, dimethoxysilylpropyl methacrylate, diethoxysilylpropyl methacrylate,
  • isopropenylbenzoic acid (all isomers), diethylamino alphamethylstyrene (all isomers), para-methyl-alpha-methylstyrene (all isomers), diisopropenylbenzene (all isomers), isopropenylbenzene sulfonic acid (all isomers), methyl 2-hydroxymethylacrylate,
  • This procedure illustrates the preparation, analysis and proof of the branch- upon-branch polymer architecture in which there are at least 5 branches in a starved feed reactor by a multi step/one pot process.
  • Conditions of the branch- upon-branch structure formation are identified from the effects of temperature, monomer, chain transfer agent and initiator concentrations and conversion on the polymer structure. The broken line in each of the following Tables will indicate where significant levels of branch-upon-branch polymers are produced.
  • the polymers of this invention with the most desirable properties are those having at least 10%. more preferably at least 25%, and most preferably above 50%, branch upon branch architecture.
  • Part I was charged into the reactor equipped with stirrer, reflux condenser, thermocouple, and nitrogen positive pressure, and heated to 70°C.
  • Part II and III were fed concurrently into the reactor over 150 and 120 minutes, respectively.
  • Copolymers 3 in contrast have an "a" Mark- Houwink coefficient of 0.35-0.50, as would be expected for a polymer having a branched rather than a linear structure.

Abstract

This invention relates to a process for the synthesis of addition polymers containing branches upon branches and having a polymerizable olefin end group by a convenient one-pot copolymerization of selected vinyl monomers with chain polymerization initiators and a method to provide olefin end groups by chain transfer or termination agents; and polymers produced thereby.

Description

TITLE
BRANCHED POLYMER SYNTHESIS
Precise macromolecular engineering using commodity monomers is becoming a major trend in polymer technology to satisfy the demand for new properties, improved cost effectiveness, ecology and quality. Functional polymers with low molecular weight, low polydispersity, compact, branched structures and terminally located reactive groups are expected to exhibit superior
performance/cost characteristics, by virtue of lower inherent viscosity and higher reactivity vs. conventional linear statistical copolymers.
The terminally functional branched polymers appear to be ultimate reactive substrates for networks, because the branch points can substitute for a significant portion of expensive reactive groups and provide a better controll of the reactive groups distribution. Particularly polymers having large numbers of short branches below critical molecular weight are unlikely to form any entanglements and should exhibit low inherent viscosity and good flow even in concentrated solutions.
Conventional techniques for sythesizing well defined branched polymers require expensive multistep processes involving isolation of reactive intermediate macromonomers. The macromonomers have polymerizable end groups, which are usually introduced using functional initiator, terminating or chain transfer agent. Well defined branched polymers are prepared by the macromonomer homopolymerization or copolymerization with suitable low molecular weight comonomer selected based on known reactivity ratios.
U.S. 4,680,352 describes molecular weight reduction and macromonomer
(polymers or copolymers with unsaturated end-groups) synthesis in
copolymerizations with acrylates and styrene with various Co(II) complexes.
J. Antoneili, et. al., U. S. 5,362, 813 and C. Berge, et al., U. S. 5,362,826 disclose the preparation of macromonomers by radical addition-fragmentation processes and the copolymerization of macromonomers. Branched structures were not well characterized and the reincorporation of the branched
macromonomers into more complex structures was not considered. Dendrimers or hyperbranched polymers prepared using expensive, special multifunctional monomers or expensive multistep methods requiring repetitive isolation of the reactive intermediates have been reviewed by J.C.Salamone, ed., Polymeric Materials Encyclopedia, Vol.5 (1996).
The references cited above cover the copolymeπzation of vinyl monomers in the presence of chain transfer reagents, but do not disclose synthetic conditions for production of macromonomers or polymers containing branches upon branches.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to a general process for the synthesis of addition polymers containing branches upon branches and having a polymerizable olefin end group by a convenient one-pot polymerization of selected vinyl monomers with chain polymerization initiators and a method to provide olefin end groups by chain transfer or termination agents. The polymerization is carried out in such a manner that chain transfer occurs frequently and each chain transfer event terminates that particular polymer chain with terminal polymerizable olefinic functionality. Subsequent reincorporation of the polymer chains produced early in the reaction leads to branching of subsequently-formed polymer chains which are terminated with polymerizable olefinic functionality. Subsequent reincorporation of the branched polymer chains leads to subsequently-formed polymer chains containing branches-upon-branches which are terminated with polymerizable olefinic functionality. Spontaneous repetition of the process leads to highly branched or hyperbranched products still retaining termini with polymerizable olefinic functionality.
This invention concerns an improved process for the free-radical polymerization of at least one unsaturated vinylic monomer to form a polymer whose molecular architecture includes branches upon branches and a
polymerizable vinyl-terminated end group, comprising contacting, in the presence of a free-radical initiator:
(i) one or more vinylic monomers having the formula CH2=CYZ, and (ii) a chain transfer agent of formula CH2=CQ-CH2-X, wherein:
Y is selected from the group consisting of OR, O2CR, halogen, CO2H, COR, CO2R, CN, CONH2, CONHR, CONR2 and R';
Z is selected H, CH3, or CH2OH;
R is selected from the group consisting of substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, substituted and unsubstituted aryl, substituted and unsubstituted heteroaryl, substituted and unsubstituted aralkyl, substituted and unsubstituted alkaryl, and substituted and unsubstituted organosilyl, the substituents being the same or different and selected from the group consisting of carboxylic acid, carboxylic ester, epoxy, hydroxyl, alkoxy, primary amino, secondary amino, tertiary amino, isocyanato, sulfonic acid and halogen, and the number of carbons in said alkyl groups is from 1 to 12; and
R' is selected from the aromatic group consisting of substituted and unsubstituted aryl, substituted and unsubstituted heteroaryl, the substituents being the same or different and selected from the group consisting of carboxylic acid, carboxylic ester, epoxy, hydroxyl, alkoxy, primary amino, secondary amino, tertiary amino, isocyanato, sulfonic acid, substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, substituted and unsubstituted aryl, substituted and unsubstituted olefin and halogen;
X is selected from -(CUY-CH2)n-Z', S(O)R, S(O)2R, SnR3, halogen, R2 and R3;
U is selected from H and R;
Q is selected from Y, or in the case where X is halogen, Y and H;
Z' is selected from H, SR1, S(O)R, S(O)2R, R2 and R3;
n is≥1;
R is selected from the group substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, aryl. aralkyl, alkaryl and organosilicon groups wherein the substituent(s) are independently from the group carboxyl, epoxy, hydroxyl, alkoxy, amino and halogen;
R1 is selected from the group H, substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, aryl, aralkyl, alkaryl and organosilicon groups wherein the substituent(s) are independently from the group carboxyl, epoxy, hydroxyl, alkoxy, amino and halogen;
R2 is selected from the group free radical initiator-derived fragments of substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, cycloalkyl, aryl, aralkyl, alkaryl, organosilyl, alkoxyalkyl, alkoxyaryl, sulfate groups wherein the substituent(s) are
independently selected from R, OR1, O2CR, halogen. CO2H and salts thereof, CO2R, CN, CONH2, CO2NHR, CONR2;
R3 is selected from the group free radical initiator-derived fragments of substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, cycloalkyl, aryl, aralkyl, alkaryl, organosilyl, alkoxyalkyl, alkoxyaryl, and P(O)R2 groups wherein the substituent(s) are independently selected from R, OR1, O2CR, halogen, CO2H and salts thereof, CO2R, CN, CONH2, CO2NHR, CONR2;
wherein the improvement comprises obtaining higher yields of polymer having the branch-upon-branch architecture and polymerizable vinylic chain termini, and a higher density of branches upon branches in that polymer by optimizing the polymerization in the following way: select step III and at least one of I; II; I and IV; and II and IV from steps:
I - decreasing reactivity ratios of (i) and the resulting vinylic-terminated macromonomers and polymers toward 0;
II - selecting the ratio of (i)/(ii) between 2 and 100, dependent on the values of I,III and lV;
III - increasing the conversion of (i) and (ii) from 80% toward 100 %;
IV - increasing the temperature from 50° toward 150°C. Based on the disclosure and Examples presented herein, one skilled in the art will be readily able to select the optimum ratio of (i)/(ii) for any given class of monomer(s) and values of (i), (iii) and (iv) with minimum experimentation. One skilled in the art will also be able to select the appropriate chain transfer agent for the monomer(s) being polymerized, by reference to the well-known reactivity ratios of said chain transfer agents and monomer(s). This invention further concerns the product of the above reaction which is composed primarily of a polymer having a branch-upon-branch structure and a polymerizable olefinic end group, having the structure:
Figure imgf000007_0001
B" = X, B', H, CH3, CH2CHR1CH3, or CH2CMeR2CH3,
n = 1-20, m = 0-5, p = 0-20; n + m + p≥2;
and if m >1, then the m insertions are not consecutive. X, Y, Z, R1 and R2 are as earlier defined.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
We have discovered a general process for the synthesis of addition polymers containing branches upon branches and having a polymerizable vinylic end group by a convenient one-pot polymerization of selected vinyl monomers with chain polymerization initiators and a method to provide olefin end groups by chain transfer or termination agents. The polymerization is carried out in such a manner that chain transfer occurs frequently and that each chain transfer event terminates that particular polymer chain terminated with polymerizable olefinic functionality. The process is shown in Scheme 1.
Figure imgf000008_0001
Subsequent reincorporation of the polymer chains produced early in the reaction leads to branching of subsequently-formed polymer chains which are terminated with polymerizable olefinic functionality. Subsequent reincorporation of the branched polymer chains leads to subsequently-formed polymer chains containing branches-upon-branches which are terminated with polymerizable olefinic functionality. Spontaneous repetition of the process leads to highly branched or hyperbranched products still retaining termini with polymerizable olefinic functionality. The polymers made by the present process are useful in a wide variety of coatings. Other potential uses can include cast, blown, spun or sprayed applications in fiber, film, sheet, composite materials, multilayer coatings, photopolymerizable materials, photoresists, surface active agents, dispersants. adhesives, adhesion promoters, coupling agents, commpatibilizers and others. End products taking advantage of available characteristics can include, for example, automotive and architectural coatings or finishes, including high solids, aqueous or solvent based finishes. Polymers, such as those produced in this invention, would find use in, for example, structured polymers for use in pigment dispersants.
In a preferred process the free-radical initiator is selected from azo initiators, typical examples of which include: 2,2'-azobis(isobutyronitrile), VAZO- 88 = 1, 1'-azobis(cyclohexane-1-carbonitrile) (DuPont Co., Wilmington, DE) VR- 110 = 2,2'-azobis(2,4,4-trimethyIpentane) (Wako Pure Chemical Industries,
Ltd., Osaka, Japan)
Chain transfer reagents, CH2=CQ-CH2-X, can be based upon vinylidene macromonomers prepared by several methods. A good example is the methyl methacrylate trimer, CH2=C(CO2Me)-CH2-CMe(CO2Me)-CH2-CMe(CO2Me)-
CH3. These radical addition-fragmentation chain transfer agents have been reviewed by E. Rizzardo, et al., Macromol. Symp. 98, 101 (1995).
Other organic chain transfer reagents include allylic sulfides, sulfones, bromides, phosphonates, stannanes, vinylidene terminated methacrylic oligomers, a-methyl styrene dimer and related compounds. Preferred chain transfer agents and polymerizable intermediate macromonomers exhibit dual reactivity, in that they can both undergo copolymerization or homopolymerization as well as promote competitive chain transfer through the addition-elimination process.
Substituent Q of the chain transfer reagent is chosen to convey the appropriate reactivity of the olefinic group in radical polymerization of the desired monomer(s) under polymerization conditions. The substituents Q and X can also be chosen so as to introduce any required end-group functionality into the polymer. Therefore using functional chain transfer agent (iii) can be a prefered method. These end groups can be the same or different and can be chosen such that the final polymer can be telechelic. Suitable end groups are particularly those compatible with free radical polymerization and include epoxy, hydroxyl, carboxyl, silyl.
The process can be potentially conducted by bulk, solution, suspension or emulsion polymerization using batch or preferably starved feed reactor, which offers better process control.
The treelike branched polymers are formed by in situ generation and copolymerization of first linear and subsequently increasingly branched macromonomers through the polymerizable olefin group. The method was demonstrated by model kinetic studies of monomer, chain transfer agent (CTA) conversions, polymer molecular weight increase combined with quantitative end group and branching characterization when reacting vinylidene MMA-trimer used as a CTA and butyl acrylate (B A) in a starved-feed reactor. Macromolecules typically with 2 to 30 branches each containing 5 to 20 monomers were prepared, branch length being primarily controlled by the monomer/chain transfer agent ratio, conversion and to some extend by temperature.
A chain polymerization is controlled by a chain transfer step so as to provide a polymerizable olefin end group (Scheme 1). The branch-upon-branch structure is built by in situ generation and copolymerization of linear and subsequently increasingly branched macromonomers through the polymerizable olefin group.
That monomer copolymerizability is primarily determined by the steric and electronic properties is well documented in the art. The chain process can involve either one or several different comonomers. Typical monomers include acrylates, methacrylates, acrylonitrile, methacrylonitrile, acrylamide,
methacrylamide, styrene, a-methylstyrene, halogenated olefins, vinyl esters, but also can include N-vinyl carbazole, N-vinyl pyrrolidone,and dienes such as isoprene, and chloroprene.
Quantitative NMR analysis of the products, particularly end group structure and branching, combined with oligomer analysis by MALDI mass spectroscopy show that conventional radical termination and chain transfer processes can be effectively suppressed under these conditions, when acrylates (or styrene) are copolymerized with the vinylidene macromonomer/chain transfer agent . The polymer molecular weight and end group structure are predominantly controlled by the β-scission chain transfer. High conversions (usually 80-90 %) of the vinylidene end group are predominantly achieved by the incorporation, i.e., copolymerization leading to branches. The data are consistent with a mechanism, in which the initially formed branched macromolecules receive predominantly the vinylidene end group through the β-scission chain transfer. Having a reactive vinylidene end group allows the singly-branched macromolecules to participate in analogous subsequent (secondary) copolymerization steps leading eventually to even more branched structures, which could be called branch-upon-branch polymers.
Formation of branch-upon-branch structures is indicated by the significant increase in the polymer molecular weight and in the number of branches per polymer molecule that occurs even at nearly complete conversion of the vinylidene (MMA)3=, which was used as a chain transfer agent and model macromonomer and at high acrylate monomer conversions. The development of characterization methods for branched polymer formation from vinylidene macromonomers by NMR, SEC, GC, MALDI mass spectroscopy was essential for developing and confirmation of this method of making branch-upon-branch structures, see E. McCord, et al., ACS Polymer Prep. 36 (2), 106 (1995).
Branching density estimated from the ratio of grafting to β-scission is primarily determined by the BA/chain transfer agent ratio, conversion and to some extend by temperature in the range 60 to 100 °C. Under standard conditions, one MMA-trimer branch occurs per 8 to 16 BA comonomers consumed, which corresponds to 1000 - 2,000 molecular weight of BA segment per one branch and is desirably below an entanglement length.
The copolymers were characterized by 1 H and 13 C NMR , by conventional SEC using RI detector vs. PMMA standards and compared with data obtained using universal calibration in THF and the light-scattering weight-average molecular weights. Under typical radical copolymerization conditions in starved feed reactor used in these studies, about a 10-fold molar excess of acrylate comonomer over methacrylate vinylidene macromonomer is required to achieve acceptable yield (> 10 %) and a significant number (>5) of branches per macromolecule. The number of 5 branches per molecule is a minimum (per definition) for branch-upon-branch structures.
Kinetic data at early and intermediate conversions showed as expected that β-scission is favored over incoφoration by higher temperatures. At almost complete vinylidene group conversion, the effect of temperature on the overall ratio of incoφoration to β-scission was found to be small. This is evidently due to somewhat higher activation energy of the competing β-scission vs. the incoφoration and due to the fact that incoφoration is a major mechanism of the vinylidene group consumption.
Preferred monomers are:
methyl acrylate,
ethyl acrylate,
propyl acrylate (all isomers),
butyl acrylate (all isomers),
2-ethylhexyl acrylate,
isobornyl acrylate,
acrylic acid,
benzyl acrylate,
phenyl acrylate,
acrylonitrile,
glycidyl acrylate,
2 -hydroxyethyl acrylate,
hydroxypropyl acrylate (all isomers),
hydroxybutyl acrylate (all isomers),
diethylaminoethyl acrylate,
triethyleneglycol acrylate,
N-tert-butyl acrylamide,
N-n-butyl acrylamide,
N-methyl-ol acrylamide, N-ethyl-ol acrylamide,
trimethoxysilylpropyl acrylate, triethoxysilylpropyl acrylate, tributoxysilylpropyl acrylate, dimethoxymethvlsilylpropyl acrylate, diethoxymethylsilylpropyl acrylate, dibutoxymethylsilylpropyl acrylate, diisopropoxymethylsilylpropyl acrylate, dimethoxysilylpropyl acrylate, diethoxysilylpropyl acrylate, dibutoxysilylpropyl acrylate, diisopropoxysilylpropyl acrylate, vinyl acetate,
vinyl propionate,
vinyl butyrate,
vinyl benzoate,
vinyl chloride,
vinyl fluoride,
vinyl bromide.
methyl methacrylate,
ethyl methacrylate,
propyl methacrylate (all isomers), butyl methacrylate (all isomers),
2-ethylhexyl methacrylate,
isobornyl methacrylate,
methacrylic acid,
benzyl methacrylate,
phenyl methacrylate,
methacrylonitrile,
alpha methyl styrene,
trimethoxysilylpropyl methacrylate, triethoxysilylpropyl methacrylate, tributoxysilylpropyl methacrylate,
dimethoxymethylsilylpropyl methacrylate, diethoxymethyl-silylpropylmethacrylate, dibutoxymethylsilylpropyl methacrylate, diisopropoxymethylsilylpropyl methacrylate, dimethoxysilylpropyl methacrylate, diethoxysilylpropyl methacrylate,
dibutoxysilylpropyl methacrylate,
diisopropoxysilylpropyl methacrylate, isopropenyl butyrate,
isopropenyl acetate,
isopropenyl benzoate,
isopropenyl chloride,
isopropenyl fluoride,
isopropenyl bromide
itaconic acid
itaconic anhydride
dimethyl itconate.
methyl itaconate
N-tert-butyl methacrylamide,
N-n-butyl methacrylamide,
N-methyl-ol methacrylamide,
N-ethyl-ol methacrylamide,
isopropenylbenzoic acid (all isomers), diethylamino alphamethylstyrene (all isomers), para-methyl-alpha-methylstyrene (all isomers), diisopropenylbenzene (all isomers), isopropenylbenzene sulfonic acid (all isomers), methyl 2-hydroxymethylacrylate,
ethyl 2-hydroxymethylacrylate,
propyl 2-hydroxymethylacrylate (all isomers), butyl 2-hydroxymethylacrylate (all isomers), 2-ethylhexyl 2-hydroxymethylacrylate,
isobornyl 2-hydroxymethylacrylate,
styrene,
vinyl benzoic acid (all isomers),
diethylamino styrene (all isomers),
para-methylstyrene (all isomers),
divinylbenzene (all isomers), and
vinyl benzene sulfonic acid (all isomers). EXAMPLES
Examples 1-15:
Preparation of Branch-Upon-Branch Poly(butyl acrylates) Using Methyl Methacrylate Vinylidene Trimer (MMA)3= as Chain Transfer Agent and Macromonomer
This procedure illustrates the preparation, analysis and proof of the branch- upon-branch polymer architecture in which there are at least 5 branches in a starved feed reactor by a multi step/one pot process. Conditions of the branch- upon-branch structure formation are identified from the effects of temperature, monomer, chain transfer agent and initiator concentrations and conversion on the polymer structure. The broken line in each of the following Tables will indicate where significant levels of branch-upon-branch polymers are produced.
The polymers of this invention with the most desirable properties are those having at least 10%. more preferably at least 25%, and most preferably above 50%, branch upon branch architecture.
Figure imgf000016_0001
Part I was charged into the reactor equipped with stirrer, reflux condenser, thermocouple, and nitrogen positive pressure, and heated to 70°C. Part II and III were fed concurrently into the reactor over 150 and 120 minutes, respectively.
After completing the addition of Part II, the reactor contents were held at 80°C for an additional 60 minutes. The copolymerization kinetics have been followed by gas chromatography, NMR and GPC. ~5 g samples of the reaction mixture were withdrawn at 20 min. intervals followed by GC determination of the BA and vinylidene MMA-trimer concentrations. Volatiles were stripped on high vacuum for several hours and the oligomers/polymers were analyzed by NMR and GPC. Decane was used as an internal standard and molar response factors were determined using mixtures of known composition containing SCT MMA-trimer, BA and decane. The kinetic data are shown in Table 1. Polymer composition was followed by Matrix Assisted Laser Desoφtion Ionization (MALDI) Mass
Spectroscopy. Polymer molecular weight was measured by SEC and viscometry. Structure of both polymers, including branching density and end groups, was characterized by 1H and 13C NMR.
Figure imgf000017_0001
Figure imgf000017_0002
The procedure described in EXAMPLE 1 was followed, three times higher than in EXP. 1 initiator concentration was used. Data are shown in Table 2.
Figure imgf000018_0001
Figure imgf000018_0002
The procedure described in EXAMPLE 1 was followed at 80°C. Kinetic data are shown in Table 3.
Figure imgf000019_0001
Figure imgf000019_0002
The procedure described in EXAMPLE 1 was followed at 90 °C. Kinetic data are shown in Table 4.
Figure imgf000020_0001
Figure imgf000020_0002
Figure imgf000021_0001
Figure imgf000022_0001
Figure imgf000023_0001
EXAMPLE 16
Demonstration of Branched Structure of Poly(butyl acrylates)l Prepared Using Methyl Methacrylate Vinvlidene Trimer (MMA)3= as Chain Transfer Agent and
Macromonomer
Linear poly(butyl acrylates) have an "a" coefficient of 0.70 in the Mark- Houwink equation, [η] = K Ma. Copolymers 3 in contrast have an "a" Mark- Houwink coefficient of 0.35-0.50, as would be expected for a polymer having a branched rather than a linear structure.

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. An improved process for the free-radical polymerization of at least one unsaturated vinylic monomer to form a polymer whose molecular architecture includes branches upon branches and a polymerizable vinyl- terminated end group, comprising contacting
(i) one or more vinylic monomers having the formula CH2=CYZ, and
(ii) a chain transfer agent of formula CH2=CQ-CH2-X, wherein:
Y is selected from the group consisting of OR, O2CR, halogen, CO2H, COR, CO2R, CN, CONH2, CONHR, CONR2 and R';
Z is selected H, CH3, or CH2OH;
R is selected from the group consisting of substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, substituted and unsubstituted aryl, substituted and unsubstituted heteroaryl, substituted and unsubstituted aralkyl, substituted and unsubstituted alkaryl, and substituted and unsubstituted organosilyl, the substituents being the same or different and selected from the group consisting of carboxylic acid, carboxylic ester, epoxy, hydroxyl, alkoxy, primary amino, secondary amino, tertiary amino, isocyanato, sulfonic acid and halogen, and the number of carbons in said alkyl groups is from 1 to 12; and
R' is selected from the aromatic group consisting of substituted and unsubstituted aryl, substituted and unsubstituted heteroaryl, the substituents being the same or different and selected from the group consisting of carboxylic acid, carboxylic ester, epoxy, hydroxyl, alkoxy, primary amino, secondary amino, tertiary amino, isocyanato. sulfonic acid, substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, substituted and unsubstituted aryl, substituted and unsubstituted olefin and halogen;
X is selected from -(CUY-CH2)n-Z', S(O)R, S(O)2R, SnR3, halogen,
R2 and R3;
U is selected from H and R;
Q is selected from Y, or in the case where X is halogen, Y and H;
Z' is selected from H, SR1, S(O)R, S(O)2R, R2 and R3: n is≥ 1 ;
R is selected from the group substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, aryl, aralkyl, alkaryl and organosilicon groups wherein the substituent(s) are independently from the group carboxyl, epoxy, hydroxyl, alkoxy, amino and halogen;
R1 is selected from the group H, substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, aryl, aralkyl, alkaryl and organosilicon groups wherein the substituent(s) are independently from the group carboxyl, epoxy, hydroxyl, alkoxy, amino and halogen;
R2 is selected from the group free radical initiator-derived fragments of substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, cycloalkyl, aryl, aralkyl, alkaryl, organosilyl, alkoxyalkyl, alkoxyaryl, sulfate groups wherein the substituent(s) are independently selected from R, OR1, O2CR, halogen, CO2H and salts thereof, CO2R, CN, CONH2, CO2NHR, CONR2;
R3 is selected from the group free radical initiator-derived fragments of substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, cycloalkyl, aryl, aralkyl, alkaryl, organosilyl, alkoxyalkyl, alkoxyaryl, and P(O)R2 groups wherein the
substituent(s) are independently selected from R, OR1, O2CR, halogen, CO2H and salts thereof, CO2R, CN, CONH2, CO2NHR, CONR2;
wherein the improvement comprises obtaining higher yields of polymer having the branch-upon-branch architecture and polymerizable vinylic chain termini, and a higher density of branches upon branches in that polymer by optimizing the polymerization in the following way: select step III and at least one of I; II; I and IV; and II and IV from steps:
I - decreasing reactivity ratios of (i) and the resulting vinylic-terminated macromonomers and polymers toward 0;
II - selecting the ratio of (i)/(ii) between 2 and 100, dependent on the values of I, III and IV;
III - increasing the conversion of (i) and (ii) from 80% toward 100 %;
IV - increasing the temperature from 50° toward 150°C.
2. A process according to Claim 1 wherein Z = H.
3. A process according to Claim 1 wherein X = (CUY-CH2)n- Z' .
4. A process according to Claim 1 wherein, in (i) , Z=H and, in (ii), X = (CUY-CH2)n- Z' .
5. A process according to Claim 1 wherein Z' is substituted alkyl, aryl, aralkyl, alkaryl, organosilyl wherein the reactive substituent(s) are independently selected from the group carboxylic acid, carboxylic ester, epoxy, hydroxyl, alkoxy, amino and halogen.
6. A process according to Claim 3 wherein:
Z is H;
Q is CO2R; and the molar ratio if (i)/(ii) is 5 to 30; and conversion of each of (i) and (ii) is 85 to 100%.
7. A composition of matter comprising a polymer having a branch- upon-branch structure and a polymerizable olefinic end group, having the structure:
Figure imgf000026_0001
B" = X, B', H, CH3, CH2CHR1CH3, or CH2CMeR2CH3,
X is selected from -(CUY-CH2)n-Z', S(O)R, S(O)2R, SnR3, halogen, R2 and R3;
Y is selected from the group consisting of OR, O2CR, halogen, CO2H,
COR, CO2R, CN, CONH2, CONHR, CONR2 and R';
Z is selected H, CH3, or CH2OH;
R1 is selected from the group H, substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, aryl, aralkyl, alkaryl and organosilicon groups wherein the substituent(s) are independently from the group carboxyl, epoxy, hydroxyl, alkoxy, amino and halogen;
R2 is selected from the group free radical initiator-derived fragments of substituted and unsubstituted alkyl, cycloalkyl, aryl, aralkyl, alkaryl, organosilyl, alkoxyalkyl, alkoxyaryl, sulfate groups wherein the substituent(s) are
independently selected from R, OR1, O2CR, halogen, CO2H and salts thereof, CO2R, CN, CONH2, CO2NHR, CONR2;
n = 1-20, m = 0-5, p = 0-20; n + m + p > 2;
and if m >1, then the m insertions are not consecutive.
8. A composition according to Claim 7 wherein X is
(CUY-CH2)n- Z'.
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IL14565097A IL145650A0 (en) 1996-02-23 1997-02-18 A process for the free-radical polymerzation of unsaturated vinylic monomers to form a polymer with a branch upon branch structure
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