A model for evaluating the instantaneous degree of polymerization distribution of homopolymers produced in emulsion, based on the mathematics of the Markov chains, is developed. The model accounts for any number of active chains per particle, as well as for the two fundamental mechanisms of chain termination: mono- and bi-molecular, both by combination and by disproportionation. The core of the model is the so called subprocess-main process treatment, which allows us to correctly evaluate the degree of polymerization of the chains growing in the polymer particles, by distinguishing between the events experienced by the polymer chain which imply a change of its degree of polymerization (subject transitions) and those which imply only a change in the particle state (environment transitions). This is obtained by properly defining the one-step transition probability matrix of the relevant Markov process. Once this is done, the evaluation of the distribution of the degrees of polymerization reduces to a few simple operations among matrices. Explicit expressions for the instantaneous probability density functions and the relative cumulative distributions are obtained. The application of such relationships is facilitated by the numerical procedures reported in the Appendices. The results of the model developed in this work are in agreement with those of earlier models in the range of parameter values of practical interest. In the limit of very low molecular weights, only the model developed in this work provides the correct answer. Moreover, a much more significant result is its applicability to the case of emulsion copolymerization, as it is shown in Part II.

Molecular-weight Distribution In Emulsion Polymerization .1. the Homopolymer Case

G. STORTI;MORBIDELLI, MASSIMO
1992-01-01

Abstract

A model for evaluating the instantaneous degree of polymerization distribution of homopolymers produced in emulsion, based on the mathematics of the Markov chains, is developed. The model accounts for any number of active chains per particle, as well as for the two fundamental mechanisms of chain termination: mono- and bi-molecular, both by combination and by disproportionation. The core of the model is the so called subprocess-main process treatment, which allows us to correctly evaluate the degree of polymerization of the chains growing in the polymer particles, by distinguishing between the events experienced by the polymer chain which imply a change of its degree of polymerization (subject transitions) and those which imply only a change in the particle state (environment transitions). This is obtained by properly defining the one-step transition probability matrix of the relevant Markov process. Once this is done, the evaluation of the distribution of the degrees of polymerization reduces to a few simple operations among matrices. Explicit expressions for the instantaneous probability density functions and the relative cumulative distributions are obtained. The application of such relationships is facilitated by the numerical procedures reported in the Appendices. The results of the model developed in this work are in agreement with those of earlier models in the range of parameter values of practical interest. In the limit of very low molecular weights, only the model developed in this work provides the correct answer. Moreover, a much more significant result is its applicability to the case of emulsion copolymerization, as it is shown in Part II.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/659281
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