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The Mayo–Lewis equation or copolymer equation in
polymer chemistry Polymer chemistry is a sub-discipline of chemistry that focuses on the structures, chemical synthesis, and chemical and physical properties of polymers and macromolecules. The principles and methods used within polymer chemistry are also applic ...
describes the distribution of
monomer A monomer ( ; ''mono-'', "one" + '' -mer'', "part") is a molecule that can react together with other monomer molecules to form a larger polymer chain or two- or three-dimensional network in a process called polymerization. Classification Chemis ...
s in a copolymer. It was proposed by Frank R. Mayo and Frederick M. Lewis.''Copolymerization. I. A Basis for Comparing the Behavior of Monomers in Copolymerization; The Copolymerization of Styrene and Methyl Methacrylate'' Frank R. Mayo and Frederick M. Lewis J. Am. Chem. Soc.; 1944; 66(9) pp 1594 - 1601; The equation considers a monomer mix of two components M_1\, and M_2\, and the four different reactions that can take place at the reactive chain end terminating in either monomer (M_1^*\, and M_2^*\,) with their reaction rate constants k\,: :M_1^* + M_1 \xrightarrow M_1M_1^* \, :M_1^* + M_2 \xrightarrow M_1M_2^* \, :M_2^* + M_2 \xrightarrow M_2M_2^* \, :M_2^* + M_1 \xrightarrow M_2M_1^* \, The reactivity ratio for each propagating chain end is defined as the ratio of the rate constant for addition of a monomer of the species already at the chain end to the rate constant for addition of the other monomer.Cowie, J.M.G. ''Polymers: Chemistry & Physics of Modern Materials'' (2nd ed., Chapman & Hall 1991) p.106 :r_1 = \frac \, :r_2 = \frac \, The copolymer equation is then:Rudin, Alfred ''The Elements of Polymer Science and Engineering'' (Academic Press 1982) p.265 :\frac =\frac with the
concentration In chemistry, concentration is the abundance of a constituent divided by the total volume of a mixture. Several types of mathematical description can be distinguished: '' mass concentration'', '' molar concentration'', '' number concentration'', ...
s of the components in square brackets. The equation gives the relative instantaneous rates of incorporation of the two monomers.


Equation derivation

Monomer 1 is consumed with reaction rate: \frac = k_ _1sum _1^*+ k_ _1sum _2^*\, with \sum _1^*/math> the concentration of all the active chains terminating in monomer 1, summed over chain lengths. \sum _2^*/math> is defined similarly for monomer 2. Likewise the rate of disappearance for monomer 2 is: \frac = k_ _2sum _1^*+ k_ _2sum _2^*\, Division of both equations by \sum _2^*\, followed by division of the first equation by the second yields: \frac = \frac \left( \frac \right) \, The ratio of active center concentrations can be found using the steady state approximation, meaning that the concentration of each type of active center remains constant. \frac = \frac \approx 0\, The rate of formation of active centers of monomer 1 (M_2^* + M_1 \xrightarrow M_2M_1^* \,) is equal to the rate of their destruction (M_1^* + M_2 \xrightarrow M_1M_2^* \,) so that k_ _1sum _2^*= k_ _2sum _1^*\, or \frac = \frac\, Substituting into the ratio of monomer consumption rates yields the Mayo–Lewis equation after rearrangement: \frac = \frac \left( \frac \right) = \frac \left( \frac \right) = \frac \frac


Mole fraction form

It is often useful to alter the copolymer equation by expressing concentrations in terms of
mole fraction In chemistry, the mole fraction or molar fraction, also called mole proportion or molar proportion, is a quantity defined as the ratio between the amount of a constituent substance, ''ni'' (expressed in unit of moles, symbol mol), and the to ...
s. Mole fractions of monomers M_1\, and M_2\, in the feed are defined as f_1\, and f_2\, where f_1 = 1 - f_2 = \frac \, Similarly, F\, represents the mole fraction of each monomer in the copolymer: F_1 = 1 - F_2 = \frac \, These equations can be combined with the Mayo–Lewis equation to give F_1=1-F_2=\frac\, This equation gives the composition of copolymer formed at each instant. However the feed and copolymer compositions can change as polymerization proceeds.


Limiting cases

Reactivity ratios indicate preference for propagation. Large r_1\, indicates a tendency for M_1^*\, to add M_1\,, while small r_1\, corresponds to a tendency for M_1^*\, to add M_2\,. Values of r_2\, describe the tendency of M_2^*\, to add M_2\, or M_1\,. From the definition of reactivity ratios, several special cases can be derived: * r_1 \approx r_2 >> 1 \, If both reactivity ratios are very high, the two monomers only react with themselves and not with each other. This leads to a mixture of two homopolymers. * r_1 \approx r_2 > 1 \,. If both ratios are larger than 1, homopolymerization of each monomer is favored. However, in the event of crosspolymerization adding the other monomer, the chain-end will continue to add the new monomer and form a block copolymer. * r_1 \approx r_2 \approx 1 \,. If both ratios are near 1, a given monomer will add the two monomers with comparable speeds and a statistical or random copolymer is formed. * r_1 \approx r_2 \approx 0 \, If both values are near 0, the monomers are unable to homopolymerize. Each can add only the other resulting in an alternating polymer. For example, the copolymerization of maleic anhydride and styrene has reactivity ratios r_1\, = 0.01 for maleic anhydride and r_2 = 0.02 for styrene. Maleic acid in fact does not homopolymerize in free radical polymerization, but will form an almost exclusively alternating copolymer with styrene. * r_1 >> 1 >> r_2 \, In the initial stage of the copolymerization, monomer 1 is incorporated faster and the copolymer is rich in monomer 1. When this monomer gets depleted, more monomer 2 segments are added. This is called composition drift. * When both r < 1 \,, the system has an
azeotrope An azeotrope () or a constant heating point mixture is a mixture of two or more liquids whose proportions cannot be changed by simple distillation.Moore, Walter J. ''Physical Chemistry'', 3rd e Prentice-Hall 1962, pp. 140–142 This happens beca ...
, where feed and copolymer composition are the same.


Calculation of reactivity ratios

Calculation of reactivity ratios generally involves carrying out several polymerizations at varying monomer ratios. The copolymer composition can be analysed with methods such as Proton nuclear magnetic resonance, Carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance, or
Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) is a technique used to obtain an infrared Electromagnetic spectrum, spectrum of Absorption (electromagnetic radiation), absorption or Emission (electromagnetic radiation), emission of a solid, liquid, ...
. The polymerizations are also carried out at low conversions, so monomer concentrations can be assumed to be constant. With all the other parameters in the copolymer equation known, r_1\, and r_2\, can be found.


Curve Fitting

One of the simplest methods for finding reactivity ratios is plotting the copolymer equation and using nonlinear least squares analysis to find the r_1\,, r_2\, pair that gives the best fit curve. This is preferred as methods such as Kelen-Tüdős or Fineman-Ross (see below) that involve linearization of the Mayo–Lewis equation will introduce bias to the results.


Mayo-Lewis Method

The Mayo-Lewis method uses a form of the copolymer equation relating r_1\, to r_2\,: r_2 = \frac\left frac(1+\frac)-1\right, For each different monomer composition, a line is generated using arbitrary r_1\, values. The intersection of these lines is the r_1\,, r_2\, for the system. More frequently, the lines do not intersect in a single point and the area in which most lines intersect can be given as a range of r_1\,, and r_2\, values.


Fineman-Ross Method

Fineman and Ross rearranged the copolymer equation into a linear form: G= Hr_1-r_2 \, where G = \frac \, and H = \frac\ Thus, a plot of H \, versus G \, yields a straight line with slope r_1\, and intercept -r_2\,


Kelen-Tüdős method

The Fineman-Ross method can be biased towards points at low or high monomer concentration, so Kelen and Tüdős introduced an arbitrary constant, \alpha = (H_H_)^ \, where H_ \, and H_ \, are the highest and lowest values of H \, from the Fineman-Ross method. The data can be plotted in a linear form \eta = \left _1+\frac\rightmu - \frac \, where \eta= G/(\alpha+H) \, and \mu= H/(\alpha+H) \,. Plotting \eta against \mu yields a straight line that gives -r_2/\alpha when \mu=0 and r_1 when \mu = 1 . This distributes the data more symmetrically and can yield better results.


Q-e scheme

A semi-empirical method for the prediction of reactivity ratios is called the Q-e scheme which was proposed by Alfrey and Price in 1947. This involves using two parameters for each monomer, Q and e . The reaction of M_1 radical with M_2 monomer is written as k_ = P_1Q_2exp(-e_1e_2) while the reaction of M_1 radical with M_1 monomer is written as k_ = P_1Q_1exp(-e_1e_1) Where P is a proportionality constant, Q is the measure of reactivity of monomer via resonance stabilization, and e is the measure of polarity of monomer (molecule or radical) via the effect of functional groups on vinyl groups. Using these definitions, r_1 and r_2 can be found by the ratio of the terms. An advantage of this system is that reactivity ratios can be found using tabulated Q-e values of monomers regardless of what the monomer pair is in the system.


External links

* copolymers @zeus.plmsc.psu.ed
Link


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Mayo-Lewis equation Polymer chemistry Equations