Cargando…

Thiol–Ene Photopolymerization: Scaling Law and Analytical Formulas for Conversion Based on Kinetic Rate and Thiol–Ene Molar Ratio

Kinetics and analytical formulas for radical-mediated thiol–ene photopolymerization were developed in this paper. The conversion efficacy of thiol–ene systems was studied for various propagation to chain transfer kinetic rate-ratio (R(K)), and thiol–ene concentration molar-ratio (R(C)). Numerical da...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Chen, Kuo-Ti, Cheng, Da-Chuan, Lin, Jui-Teng, Liu, Hsia-Wei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6835589/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31658683
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym11101640
_version_ 1783466708046970880
author Chen, Kuo-Ti
Cheng, Da-Chuan
Lin, Jui-Teng
Liu, Hsia-Wei
author_facet Chen, Kuo-Ti
Cheng, Da-Chuan
Lin, Jui-Teng
Liu, Hsia-Wei
author_sort Chen, Kuo-Ti
collection PubMed
description Kinetics and analytical formulas for radical-mediated thiol–ene photopolymerization were developed in this paper. The conversion efficacy of thiol–ene systems was studied for various propagation to chain transfer kinetic rate-ratio (R(K)), and thiol–ene concentration molar-ratio (R(C)). Numerical data were analyzed using analytical formulas and compared with the experimental data. We demonstrated that our model for a thiol–acrylate system with homopolymerization effects, and for a thiol–norbornene system with viscosity effects, fit much better with the measured data than a previous model excluding these effects. The general features for the roles of R(K) and R(C) on the conversion efficacy of thiol (C(T)) and ene (C(V)) are: (i) for R(K) = 1, C(V) and C(T) have the same temporal profiles, but have a reversed dependence on R(C); (ii) for R(K) >> 1, C(T) are almost independent of R(C); (iii) for R(K) << 1, C(V) and C(T) have the same profiles and both are decreasing functions of the homopolymerization effects defined by k(CV); (iv) viscosity does not affect the efficacy in the case of R(K) >> 1, but reduces the efficacy of C(V) for other values of R(K). For a fixed light dose, higher light intensity has a higher transient efficacy but a lower steady-state conversion, resulting from a bimolecular termination. In contrast, in type II unimolecular termination, the conversion is mainly governed by the light dose rather than its intensity. For optically thick polymers, the light intensity increases with time due to photoinitiator depletion, and thus the assumption of constant photoinitiator concentration (as in most previous models) suffers an error of 5% to 20% (underestimated) of the crosslink depth and the efficacy. Scaling law for the overall reaction order, defined by [A](m)[B](n) and governed by the types of ene and the rate ratio is discussed herein. The dual ratio (R(K) and R(C)) for various binary functional groups (thiol–vinyl, thiol–acrylate, and thiol–norbornene) may be tailored to minimize side effects for maximal monomer conversion or tunable degree of crosslinking.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6835589
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-68355892019-11-25 Thiol–Ene Photopolymerization: Scaling Law and Analytical Formulas for Conversion Based on Kinetic Rate and Thiol–Ene Molar Ratio Chen, Kuo-Ti Cheng, Da-Chuan Lin, Jui-Teng Liu, Hsia-Wei Polymers (Basel) Article Kinetics and analytical formulas for radical-mediated thiol–ene photopolymerization were developed in this paper. The conversion efficacy of thiol–ene systems was studied for various propagation to chain transfer kinetic rate-ratio (R(K)), and thiol–ene concentration molar-ratio (R(C)). Numerical data were analyzed using analytical formulas and compared with the experimental data. We demonstrated that our model for a thiol–acrylate system with homopolymerization effects, and for a thiol–norbornene system with viscosity effects, fit much better with the measured data than a previous model excluding these effects. The general features for the roles of R(K) and R(C) on the conversion efficacy of thiol (C(T)) and ene (C(V)) are: (i) for R(K) = 1, C(V) and C(T) have the same temporal profiles, but have a reversed dependence on R(C); (ii) for R(K) >> 1, C(T) are almost independent of R(C); (iii) for R(K) << 1, C(V) and C(T) have the same profiles and both are decreasing functions of the homopolymerization effects defined by k(CV); (iv) viscosity does not affect the efficacy in the case of R(K) >> 1, but reduces the efficacy of C(V) for other values of R(K). For a fixed light dose, higher light intensity has a higher transient efficacy but a lower steady-state conversion, resulting from a bimolecular termination. In contrast, in type II unimolecular termination, the conversion is mainly governed by the light dose rather than its intensity. For optically thick polymers, the light intensity increases with time due to photoinitiator depletion, and thus the assumption of constant photoinitiator concentration (as in most previous models) suffers an error of 5% to 20% (underestimated) of the crosslink depth and the efficacy. Scaling law for the overall reaction order, defined by [A](m)[B](n) and governed by the types of ene and the rate ratio is discussed herein. The dual ratio (R(K) and R(C)) for various binary functional groups (thiol–vinyl, thiol–acrylate, and thiol–norbornene) may be tailored to minimize side effects for maximal monomer conversion or tunable degree of crosslinking. MDPI 2019-10-10 /pmc/articles/PMC6835589/ /pubmed/31658683 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym11101640 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Chen, Kuo-Ti
Cheng, Da-Chuan
Lin, Jui-Teng
Liu, Hsia-Wei
Thiol–Ene Photopolymerization: Scaling Law and Analytical Formulas for Conversion Based on Kinetic Rate and Thiol–Ene Molar Ratio
title Thiol–Ene Photopolymerization: Scaling Law and Analytical Formulas for Conversion Based on Kinetic Rate and Thiol–Ene Molar Ratio
title_full Thiol–Ene Photopolymerization: Scaling Law and Analytical Formulas for Conversion Based on Kinetic Rate and Thiol–Ene Molar Ratio
title_fullStr Thiol–Ene Photopolymerization: Scaling Law and Analytical Formulas for Conversion Based on Kinetic Rate and Thiol–Ene Molar Ratio
title_full_unstemmed Thiol–Ene Photopolymerization: Scaling Law and Analytical Formulas for Conversion Based on Kinetic Rate and Thiol–Ene Molar Ratio
title_short Thiol–Ene Photopolymerization: Scaling Law and Analytical Formulas for Conversion Based on Kinetic Rate and Thiol–Ene Molar Ratio
title_sort thiol–ene photopolymerization: scaling law and analytical formulas for conversion based on kinetic rate and thiol–ene molar ratio
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6835589/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31658683
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym11101640
work_keys_str_mv AT chenkuoti thiolenephotopolymerizationscalinglawandanalyticalformulasforconversionbasedonkineticrateandthiolenemolarratio
AT chengdachuan thiolenephotopolymerizationscalinglawandanalyticalformulasforconversionbasedonkineticrateandthiolenemolarratio
AT linjuiteng thiolenephotopolymerizationscalinglawandanalyticalformulasforconversionbasedonkineticrateandthiolenemolarratio
AT liuhsiawei thiolenephotopolymerizationscalinglawandanalyticalformulasforconversionbasedonkineticrateandthiolenemolarratio