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Miniemulsion copolymerization of vinyl acetate and butyl acrylate. I. Differences between the miniemulsion copolymerization and the emulsion copolymerization processes
99
Citations
12
References
1986
Year
EngineeringSoft MatterEmulsionPolymersChemical EngineeringPolymer ProcessingMiniemulsion CopolymerizationPolymer ChemistrySurfactant SolutionMaterials ScienceEmulsion CopolymerizationPolymer BlendMiniemulsion ProcessVinyl AcetateChemical Enhanced Oil RecoveryPolymer SolutionPolymer ScienceMicroemulsionPolymer CharacterizationPolymerization KineticsEmulsion Copolymerization Processes
Abstract Differences between the emulsion copolymerization and miniemulsion copolymerization processes, in terms of emulsifier adsorption, emulsion stability, polymerization kinetics, copolymer composition and dynamic mechanical properties were studied for the comonomer mixture of 50:50 molar ratio vinyl acetate (VA+)—butyl acrylate (BuA), using sodium hexadecyl sulfate (SHS) as a surfactant and hexadecane (HD) as a co‐surfactant. The use of hexadecane with the appropriate SHS initial concentration led to a higher adsorption of surfactant, smaller droplet size, higher stability of the emulsions, lower polymerization rates, and larger latex particle size. The copolymer composition during the initial 70% conversion was found to be less rich in Vac monomer units for the miniemulsion process. The dynamic mechanical properties of the copolymer films showed less mixing between the BuA‐rich core and the VAc‐rich shell in the miniemulsion latexes compared to the conventional latex films.
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