Abstract
AbstractEvidence suggesting that the ultimate latex particles formed in the emulsion polymerisation of styrene are formed by the coalescence of unstable primary particles appears incompatible with the usual assumption that latex particles are predominantly nucleated from monomer‐swollen micelles in this system. However, this is not necessarily the case if the rate of emulsifier adsorption is not always sufficient to maintain a saturated monolayer of adsorbed emulsifier at the surface of growing latex particles so long as emulsifier micelles remain in the system. This appears to be the situation particularly when non‐ionic emulsifiers are used. Even with ionic emulsifiers abnormally high emulsifier/monomer ratios are needed to prevent the coalescence of primary latex particles. Some very high molecular weight polymer (controlled by the transfer constant to monomer) would be expected in the initial stage of styrene emulsion polymerisation if the micellar nucleation of latex particles is dominant.
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