13 research outputs found

    Towards a consistent mechanism of emulsion polymerization—new experimental details

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    The application of atypical experimental methods such as conductivity measurements, optical microscopy, and nonstirred polymerizations to investigations of the ‘classical’ batch ab initio emulsion polymerization of styrene revealed astonishing facts. The most important result is the discovery of spontaneous emulsification leading to monomer droplets even in the quiescent styrene in water system. These monomer droplets with a size between a few and some hundreds of nanometers, which are formed by spontaneous emulsification as soon as styrene and water are brought into contact, have a strong influence on the particle nucleation, the particle morphology, and the swelling of the particles. Experimental results confirm that micelles of low-molecular-weight surfactants are not a major locus of particle nucleation. Brownian dynamics simulations show that the capture of matter by the particles strongly depends on the polymer volume fraction and the size of the captured species (primary free radicals, oligomers, single monomer molecules, or clusters)

    Ion-molecule reactions in uranium hexafluoride

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    Ion-molecule reactions of methyl fluoride and methylene chloride

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    Ion-molecule reactions in Trihalo- and Tetrahalo-methanes

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    Energy dependence of ion-molecule reactions. II. Methyl chloride

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    Energy dependence of ion-molecule reactions. I. Methane

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    The reactions of the sulfate radical ion with phenylacetic and 4-phenylbutanoic acids

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    Ion-molecule reactions in methylene fluoride

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