Abstract

A well-defined, amphiphilic poly(styrene- co-acrylic acid) copolymer was synthesized in a single step by nitroxide-mediated controlled free-radical copolymerization of styrene and acrylic acid, without protection of the acid groups: M n=6500 g mol −1, M w/ M n=1.5 and a composition of F AA=0.70±0.03 in acrylic acid. In addition to the good control over molar mass and molar mass distribution, the copolymer exhibited a narrow composition distribution with a slight gradient. Such copolymer was an efficient stabilizer for the emulsion polymerizations of styrene and of mixtures of methyl methacrylate and n-butyl acrylate, until 45 wt% solids. A low amount (typically 3–4 wt% based on the monomer(s)) was needed for a good stabilization. This is approximately a decade lower than the required amount of random, amphiphilic copolymers prepared via conventional free-radical polymerization. The performances were, however, below those of analogous diblock copolymers, but the great advantage is the very easy synthetic procedure.

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