Abstract
AbstractMethacrylic acid (MAA) and acrylic acid (AA) were grafted onto high‐density polyethylene (PE) with UV initiation and a range of solvents. With acetone as the solvent, MAA was more easily grafted onto PE when the photoinitiator benzophenone was precoated on PE than when it was dissolved in the monomer solution. The grafting was faster in aliphatic solvents than in polar solvents or a UV‐adsorbing aromatic solvent (toluene). Acetone itself could initiate the photografting of both MAA and AA onto PE when it was mixed with water. The extent of grafting of MAA onto PE showed a maximum when there was about 40% acetone in the mixture. For AA, when the acetone/water concentration was 10%, the extent of grafting increased rapidly with the irradiation time. At higher acetone concentrations, the extent of grafting was low. Atomic force microscopy images showed that the surface topography of PE grafted with MAA in acetone/water was quite different from that obtained when the grafting was performed in other organic solvents. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part A: Polym Chem 42: 253–262, 2004
Published Version
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