Abstract

In order to enhance their resistance to polar solvents and their film forming ability compared to these of neat polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP), water soluble copolymers which combined rather large PVP sequences with ammonium groups were obtained. Free radical copolymerization of 1-Vinyl-2-Pyrrolidone (NVP) with 3-(dimethylamino)propyl-methacrylamide (DMA) and 3-(methacrylamido)propyltrimethyl-ammonium, methylsulfate (TMA) was investigated in water at 68°C using a water soluble initiator (4,4′-azobis(4-cyanovaleric acid ACVA)). The copolymer samples obtained at low conversion levels (<10%) could not be recovered quantitatively for these particular copolymers. Therefore, a numerical integration modeling, accounting for change in copolymer composition with conversion, was preferred to determine the optimal reactivity ratios from experimental data obtained at moderate conversions. The reactivity ratios (system TMA–NVP: rTMA 4.47, rNVP 0.038, system DMA–NVP: rDMA 5.67, rNVP 0.37) proved a strong preferential incorporation of the methacrylamide monomers. The reactivity ratios were then used to estimate the copolymer sequence distributions. It is shown that rather large NVP sequences can be obtained with low TMA or DMA initial contents at moderate conversion. Moreover, these copolymers easily formed films which withstood polar solvents and could be readily cross-linked by thermal curing, opening interesting prospects for membrane separation systems.

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