Achieving large and uniform particle sizes
Production of homogeneous polystyrene microparticles in a stable dispersion
Dispersions of polymer particles in a liquid phase (latexes) have many important applications in coatings technology, medical imaging, and cell biology. A French team of researchers have now developed a method, reported in the journal Angewandte Chemie, to produce stable polystyrene dispersions with unprecedentedly large, and uniform, particle sizes. Narrow size distributions are essential in many advanced technologies, but were previously difficult to produce photochemically.
Polystyrene, often used to create expanded foam, is also well suited to the production of latexes, in which the microscopically tiny polystyrene particles are suspended and which are used in the manufacture of coatings and paints, but also for calibration purposes in microscopy as well as in medical imaging and cell biology research. They are usually produced by thermally or redox-induced polymerization within the solution.
To obtain an external control over the process, the teams Muriel Lansalot, Emmanuel Lacôte, and Elodie Bourgeat-Lami at the Université Lyon 1, France, and colleagues, have turned to light-driven processes. “Light-driven polymerization ensures temporal control, because polymerization proceeds only in the presence of light, whereas thermal methods can be started but not stopped once they are underway,” Lacôte says.
Although UV- or blue-light-based photopolymerization systems have been established, they have limitations. Short-wavelength radiation is scattered when the particle size becomes close to the radiation wavelength, making latexes with particle sizes larger than the incoming wavelengths difficult to produce. In addition, UV light is highly energy-intensive, not to mention hazardous to the humans working with it.
The researchers therefore developed a fine-tuned chemical initiation system that responds to standard LED light in the visible range. This polymerization system, which is based on an acridine dye, stabilizers, and a borane compound, was the first to overcome the “300-nanometer ceiling,” the size limit of UV and blue-light-driven polymerization in a dispersed medium. As a result, for the first time, the team were able to use light to produce polystyrene latexes with particle sizes greater than one micrometer and with highly uniform diameters.
The team suggest applications well beyond polystyrene. “The system could potentially be used in all areas where latexes are used, such as films, coatings, supports for diagnostics, and more,” Lacôte says. In addition, the polymer particles could be modified with fluorescent dyes, magnetic clusters, or other functionalities useful for diagnostic and imaging applications. The team says that a broad range of particle sizes spanning the nano and micro scales would be accessible “simply by tuning the initial conditions.”
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About the Author
Muriel Lansalot is a CNRS director of research at the Laboratory of Catalysis, Polymerization, Processes and Materials (CP2M) at the University Claude Bernard Lyon 1 and CPE Lyon, France. Her research is focused on the synthesis of polymer and nanocomposite particles using different approaches such as radical polymerization in dispersed media, polymerization-induced self-assembly, and photopolymerization in emulsion and dispersion.
JOURNAL
Angewandte Chemie International Edition
METHOD OF RESEARCH
Experimental study
SUBJECT OF RESEARCH
Not applicable
ARTICLE TITLE
Visible-Light Initiated Dispersion Photopolymerization of Styrene
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