Abstract

AbstractThis study investigates atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) of methyl methacrylate (MMA) using activators generated by electron transfer (AGET) as the initiation technique in an emulsion well‐mixed 2L stirred tank reactor. The performance of the AGET ATRP of MMA is analyzed for five key independent variables, namely temperature, catalyst complex (CuBr2/dNbpy), initiator (EBiB), reducing agent (ascorbic acid), and surfactant (Brij 98). The reaction is carried out based on a two‐step polymerization procedure. A resolution 5 fractional factorial design technique is employed to assess the influence of the five independent variables on the monomer conversion, polymer average molecular weights, and polydispersity index (PDI). An input–output model is constructed from the data of 21 designed experimental tests. A statistical analysis of the results shows that the temperature is the most influential variable for the three output process responses. The initiator strongly affects the poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) molecular weights. It is the least important key variable affecting MMA conversion and PDI, and the surfactant is the least one affecting PMMA Mn. On assessing the independent interactions effect, the interactions of temperature‐surfactant on conversion, and temperature‐initiator for PMMA Mn are considered. Process simulation in 3D mapping has demonstrated that model predictions agree well with experimental data.

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