Surfactant concentration effects on the aqueous phase polymerization of vinyl acetate Article uri icon

abstract

  • Vinyl acetate (VAc) in concentrations below the water saturation value was polymerized by batch processes at 60°C using low surfactant concentrations of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and potassium persulfate (KPS) as initiator. The effects of surfactant concentration on the reaction kinetics, particle formation and molecular weight were studied. It was found that the average particle diameters decrease between 277 and 18.7 nm as the surfactant concentration is increased from 0 to 11 mmol/L, whereas the weight average molecular weight (Mw) decreases also, with values between 8.7 x 105 ≤ Mw ≤ 1 x 105Da. It was observed that particle size distributions are strongly affected by the addition of small amounts of surfactant. For the low monomer concentrations used in the polymerizations (0.0137 g/cm3 of water), particles were very stable and no coagulation was observed. High reaction rates were found in all polymerizations. When no SDS was added to the system, lower polymerization rates were obtained at the onset of the reaction due to the low rate of particle formation. The behavior of polymerization rate was inversely proportional to the surfactant concentration, which was ascribed to the increase in the average number of radicals per particle.

publication date

  • 2009-01-01