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Sulfonation of polystyrene: Toward the “ideal” polyelectrolyte
94
Citations
41
References
2013
Year
Sulfuric AcidChemical EngineeringMacromolecular ChemistryEngineeringPolymer TechnologyPolymer SolutionPolymer MaterialPolymer ScienceNarrow Polydispersity PolystyreneOrganic ChemistryPolymer CharacterizationChemistryDesulfurizationPolystyrene SulfonatePolymer ReactionPolymer ChemistryPolymer SynthesisPolymers
ABSTRACT Sulfonation of narrow polydispersity polystyrene, PS, standards remains the method of choice for generating polystyrene sulfonate, PSS, samples with defined composition. Although a variety of sulfonation techniques have been described, relatively little is reported on the material obtained, which is used for so many studies on the fundamental behavior of polyelectrolytes. Here, we show that powdered polystyrene treated with concentrated sulfuric acid (96%) at 90 °C without catalyst yields fully sulfonated PSS. Extensive characterization with 1 H and 13 C NMR as well as size exclusion chromatography coupled with static and dynamic light scattering shows no evidence of sulfone crosslinking or chain degradation under the conditions used. Though mono‐sulfonated as soon as it dissolves in the acid, the PSS contains about 6% meta substitution. Sulfonation kinetics for this heterogeneous reaction depend strongly on particle size, sulfuric acid content and temperature. For preparing perdeuterated PSS from the corresponding PS it is essential to employ D 2 SO 4 , as about half of the aromatic units undergo H/D exchange during sulfonation. The remaining ortho H/D may be exchanged with extended exposure to the concentrated sulfuric acid, but the meta site is deactivated. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J. Polym. Sci., Part A: Polym. Chem. 2013, 51, 2416–2624
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