Abstract

AbstractVinyl chloride/vinyl bromide (VC/VBr) copolymers have been synthesized by radical copolymerization in bulk. Conversion increases and molecular weight of the copolymers decreases with increasing VBr in the feed. This indicates that VBr is a chain transfer agent in VC/VBr copolymerization systems. In accordance with the lower thermal stability of the vinylbromide homopolymer (PVBr), thermal degradation experiments show that the stability of the copolymers significantly decreases with increasing VBr content. It has been found that the initial rate of dehydrohalogenation is an exponential function of VBr content during thermal degradation of VC/VBr copolymers. In separate experiments, HBr evolved during degradation has been determined by a bromide selective electrode. The initial dehydrobromination rates of VC/VBr copolymers containing higher fractions of VBr are markedly higher than the initial dehydrochlorination rates. This clearly indicates the lower thermal stability of VBr monomer units compared with VC units. UV and visible spectra of degraded VC/VBr copolymers show that the absorption and the average length of polyenes are higher for samples with higher VBr content.Dehydrohalogenation curves obtained during photodegradation of VC/VBr copolymers show a faster initial phase followed by a slower stationary phase. The initial rate of dehydrohalogenation is higher for copolymers containing higher fractions of VBr, whereas these copolymers reach the slower stationary phases at lower extents of dehydrohalogenation.

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