Narrow or Monodisperse, Physically Cross-Linked, and
"Living" Spherical Polymer Particles by One-Stage RAFT Precipitation
Polymerization
Zheng, CG (Zheng, Congguang); Zhou, Y (Zhou, Yan); Jiao, YP (Jiao, Yanpeng); Zhang, HQ (Zhang, Huiqi)[ 1 ]
MACROMOLECULES, 2019, 52(1): 143-156
DOI: 10.1021/acs.macromol.8b02031
Abstract
Controlled
preparation of narrow or mono disperse, physically cross-linked, and
"living" spherical polymer particles by one-stage reversible addition
fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) precipitation polymerization (RAFTPP) is
described for the first time. The introduction of RAFT polymerization mechanism
into precipitation polymerization system, together with the use of methacrylic
acid (MAA) (capable of forming hydrogen bonding) as the monomer, allows ready
generation of uniform spherical poly(MAA) (PMAA) particles with surface-bound
"living" dithioester groups, easily tunable sizes, and low molecular
weights in the absence of any cross-linking monomer. The polymerization
parameters (i.e., monomer loading, molar ratio of the RAFT agent to free radical
initiator, and polymerization temperature) showed much influence on the
morphologies and yields of PMAA particles, and their simple adjustment allows
fine-tuning of "living" PMAA particle sizes. The presence of
dithioester groups on such PMAA particles was confirmed not only by their light
pink color and characteristic UV-vis absorbance peak of dithioester units but
also by their capability of directly grafting cross-linked apolar polymer
shells. Some uniform "living" PMAA-based functional copolymer
microspheres were also prepared in a one-stage process by simply incorporating
glycidyl methacrylate, 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate, or a fluorescent monomer
into the RAFTPP of MAA, demonstrating the high versatility and general
applicability of the RAFTPP system. The polymerization of MAA in RAFTPP proved
to occur both in the continuous phase and on PMAA particle surfaces instead of
inside particles, and a combined "grafting from" and "grafting
to" particle growth mechanism is proposed for RAFTPP.