Synthesis of graft copolymers based on polyphenylene xylylene and fullerene grafted polystyrene

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Author listWootthikanokkhan J., Thanachayanont C., Seeponkai N.

PublisherWiley

Publication year2010

JournalJournal of Applied Polymer Science (0021-8995)

Volume number116

Issue number1

Start page433

End page440

Number of pages8

ISSN0021-8995

eISSN1097-4628

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-75449092847&doi=10.1002%2fapp.31468&partnerID=40&md5=4b97223bffe07770875aee005af52953

LanguagesEnglish-Great Britain (EN-GB)


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Abstract

Graft copolymers containing poly(phenylene xylyene) (PPX) backbone and polystyrene fullerene (PSFu) grafting chains (PPX-g-PSFu) were prepared by using a purposed synthetic route comprising a combination of reaction mechanisms namely the modified Wessling route, an iniferter polymerization, and an atom transfer radical addition (ATRA). The monomer was first prepared by reacting dichloroxylene with tetrahydrothiophene. After that the monomer was polymerized in a sodium hydroxide solution to provide a polymer precursor. Subsequently, the polymer precursor was modified by reacting it with a dithiocarbamate (DTC) compound. The macroiniferter was obtained and then copolymerized with styrene and chloromethylstyrene via an iniferter polymerization. Finally, the graft copolymer was reacted with fullerene through an ATRA technique to attach the C60 groups onto the graft copolymer molecule. The products obtained from each of the steps were characterized by using various techniques including Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, gel permeation chromatography, differential scanning calorimetry, UV- visible spectroscopy, and thermal gravimetric analysis. The aforementioned results suggest that the graft copolymers were prepared. The grafting yield and grafting efficiency were found to increase with the monomers concentration and the amount of DTC used. Some homopolymer contaminants also occurred but those could be minimized and subsequently removed by extraction with selective solvents. These graft copolymer products might be used for the development of a bulk heterojunction polymer solar cell. ฉ 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.


Keywords

FullerenesLiving polymerizations


Last updated on 2023-04-10 at 07:35