Abstract

HypothesisSurfactant-free microemulsions (SFMEs) were recently reported to be an interesting medium for free-radical polymerizations. The aim of this study is to investigate the link between the morphology of PMMA monopolymers as well as PMMA-PHEMA-copolymers with the expected nature of the SFME before polymerization. A surfactant-based microemulsion with nonionic surfactants was investigated as a reference system. It is expected that the kind of mesostructuring of the SFME (oil-in-water-like, bicontinuous, inverse) corresponds with the latter polymer morphology, just like it is the case in surfactant-based systems. ExperimentsSimple SFME systems composed of water, a hydrotrope (isopropanol or tert-butyl alcohol), and methyl methacrylate (MMA) as polymerizable oil as well as the more complex system comprising 2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate (HEMA) as an additional amphiphilic co-monomer, were investigated. A surfactant-based system using a mixture of Tergitol 15-S-12 and Synperonic A11-LQ-(TH) as surfactants, water, and MMA in the presence and absence of HEMA as polymerizable co-surfactant was investigated as a reference system. Structural analysis was done by recording (pseudo-)ternary phase diagrams, dynamic light scattering (DLS), and conductivity measurements. Polymerizations were performed using the oil-soluble initiator PEROXAN BCC at 318 K for 24 h with adjacent lyophilization. The morphology of dried polymers was determined by light microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and BET adsorption isotherms. FindingsPorous polymers of different morphologies (from coagulations of droplet-like aggregates to sponge-like ones) in the size range of 200 nm up to some µm can be derived from previously mesostructured, surfactant-free mixtures. Previously unstructured, oil-rich regions lead to solid, transparent polymers without nanostructured morphologies. The surfactant-based reference system comprises remarkably similar phase behavior before polymerizations and similar polymer morphologies as the comparable surfactant-free system. This leads to the assumption that the hydrotropic behavior of HEMA and its interplay with MMA and water is the structure-giving factor in this system.

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