화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Polymer Science Part A: Polymer Chemistry, Vol.37, No.24, 4570-4581, 1999
Degradation and stabilization of polycyanoacrylates
Polycyanoacrylates were found to be inherently unstable. Even in the absence of a deliberately added strong base, their molecular weights decreased drastically on standing in solution in accord with observations by Ryan and McCann (Makromol Chem Rapid Commun 1996, 17, 217). The initial high molecular weight polymer disappeared over the course of a few hours in solution and was replaced by a much lower molecular weight material. For polymers made by anionic polymerization, the entire sample degraded, but for polymers made by free-radical polymerization, only a portion of the sample was affected. This behavior was consistent with the mechanism proposed by Ryan and McCann, in which the polymer chains are in dynamic equilibrium with their monomers and the polymer degrades from its chain terminus. Surprisingly, the degradation in molecular weight even occurred slowly in the solid state. The degradation was inhibited by acids and could be prevented by free-radical copolymerization with small amounts of more stable monomers.