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1.
J Org Chem ; 83(5): 2912-2919, 2018 03 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29390175

ABSTRACT

The effect of amines on the kinetics and efficacy of radical-mediated thiol-ene coupling (TEC) reactions was investigated. By varying the thiol reactant and amine additive, it was shown that amines retard thiyl radical-mediated reactions when the amine is adequately basic enough to deprotonate the thiol affording the thiolate anion, e.g., when the weakly basic amine tetramethylethylenediamine was incorporated in the TEC reaction between butyl 2-mercaptoacetate and an allyl ether at 5 mol %, the final conversion was reduced from quantitative to <40%. Alternatively, no effect is observed when the less acidic thiol butyl 3-mercaptopropionate is employed. The thiolate anion was established as the retarding species through the introduction of ammonium and thiolate salt additives into TEC formulations. The formation of a two-sulfur three-electron bonded disulfide radical anion (DRA) species by the reaction of a thiyl radical with a thiolate anion was determined as the cause for the reduction in catalytic radicals and the TEC rate. Thermodynamic and kinetic trends in DRA formations were computed using density functional theory and by modeling the reaction as an associative electron transfer process. These trends correlate well with the experimental retardation trends of various thiolate anions in TEC reactions.

2.
Macromol Rapid Commun ; 38(5)2017 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28117518

ABSTRACT

Since nanostructured amphiphilic macromolecules capable of affording high ion and water transport are becoming increasingly important in a wide range of contemporary energy and environmental technologies, the swelling kinetics and temperature dependence of water uptake are investigated in a series of midblock-sulfonated thermoplastic elastomers. Upon self-assembly, these materials maintain a stable hydrogel network in the presence of a polar liquid. In this study, real-time water-sorption kinetics in copolymer films prepared by different casting solvents are elucidated by synchrotron small-angle X-ray scattering and gravimetric measurements, which directly correlate nanostructural changes with macroscopic swelling to establish fundamental structure-property behavior. By monitoring the equilibrium swelling capacity of these materials over a range of temperatures, an unexpected transition in the vicinity of 50 °C has been discovered. Depending on copolymer morphology and degree of sulfonation, hydrothermal conditioning of specimens to temperatures above this transition permits retention of superabsorbent swelling at ambient temperature.


Subject(s)
Hydrogels/chemical synthesis , Polymers/chemistry , Temperature , Adsorption , Hydrogels/chemistry , Kinetics , Nanostructures/chemistry , Water/chemistry
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