Abstract

AbstractThe polymerization of styrene, initiated by lithium diethylamide in mixtures of benzene and THF, has been investigated. Kinetic and molecular weight measurements are interpreted on the basis of simultaneous initiation and propagation steps, and the effect of solvation and coordination processes on these reactions is discussed. Initiation of polymerization is thought to involve addition of solvated lithium diethylamide ion‐airs to styrene, giving species with diethylamide end groups. The possible influence of these end groups on the initiation is considered in terms of an intramolecular cyclization process. Propagation of polymerization is believed to involve polystyryllithium ion‐pairs, solvated to varying extents by THF. No evidence has been found to suggest that chain transfer, or termination, reactions are an integral part of the polymerization process. The polymerization has a number of similarities to the alkyllithium‐initiated polymerization of styrene, but also exhibits some interesting differences.

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