2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(252d) Integrating Plasma Surface Initiation with "Living" Nitroxide-Mediated Polymerization: Novel Approach to Graft Polymerization
In the present work, the objective is to integrate plasma surface treatment at atmospheric pressure with Controlled "Living" Radical Graft Polymerization to create a high density of uniform length polymer chains tethered to a stable inorganic substrate surface. The use of atmospheric plasma is particularly attractive since it does not require an ultra-high vacuum chamber for plasma processing. The substrate surface is first treated with atmospheric pressure plasma to create surface peroxide groups. Controlled polymer grafting via Nitroxide-mediated polymerization is then conducted by addition of Styrene monomer under specified reaction conditions and stoichiometric amounts of TEMPO (2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-1-piperidinoxyl). TEMPO is a free-radical scavenger that reversibly binds to the growing Polystyrene chain and both controls the growth of the chain and significantly reduces chain termination. While there are many approaches towards controlled "living" polymerization, the current approach was chosen because it does not require the presence of surface macroinitiators or catalysts and results in a relatively low polydispersity of polymer chain lengths. A series of graft polymerization studies were carried out to elucidate the kinetics of Polystyrene grafting under both classical and Nitroxide-mediated mechanisms. A strategy for growing long polymer chains from the surface was employed using low initial monomer concentration and relatively mild reaction temperature (< 100oC). Linear polymer chain growth was demonstrated through spectroscopic ellipsometry. Chemical functionality of the modified surface was confirmed by IR spectroscopy. Surface topology and surface feature uniformity was characterized by Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM). Post-chemical modification of the polymer surfaces produced by the present approach for chemical sensor development will be discussed and demonstrated.