Publications by authors named "Schork F"

Mechanochemistry is a promising approach for chemical recycling of commodity plastics, and in some cases depolymerization to the monomer(s) has been reported. However, while poly(olefin)s comprise the largest share of global commodity plastics, mechanochemical depolymerization of these polymers in standard laboratory-scale ball mill reactors suffers from slow rates. In this work, the observed reactivities of poly(styrene), poly(ethylene) and poly(propylene) are rationalized on the basis of thermodynamic limitations of their depolymerization by depropagation of free radical intermediates.

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The dual concepts of monomer equilibrium and monomer transport in emulsion and miniemulsion polymerization are discussed in depth. The concepts must be considered together since, first, dispersed-phase polymerizations (in this case emulsion and miniemulsion polymerizations) are by their nature multiphase systems that function only due to interphase mass transfer; and second, because phase equilibrium determines the driving force for monomer transport in these (and all heterophase reaction) systems. Concepts of polymer particle swelling are reviewed, and the question first addressed by Paul Flory in the 1950s: is revisited in detail.

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Synthetic polyolefinic plastics comprise one of the largest shares of global plastic waste, which is being targeted for chemical recycling by depolymerization to monomers and small molecules. One promising method of chemical recycling is solid-state depolymerization under ambient conditions in a ball-mill reactor. In this paper, we elucidate kinetic phenomena in the mechanochemical depolymerization of poly(styrene).

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A comprehensive overview of the fundamentals of emulsion polymerization and related processes is presented with the object of providing theoretical and practical understanding to researchers considering use of these methods for synthesis of polymer colloids across a wide range of applications. Hence, the overview has been written for a general scientific audience with no prior knowledge assumed. Succinct introductions are given to key topics of background science to assist the reader.

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In this work, we introduce a kinetic model to study the effectiveness of ester-mediated amide bond formation under prebiotic conditions. In our previous work, we found that a simple system composed of α-hydroxy acids and α-amino acids is capable of forming peptide bonds via esterification followed by the ester-amide exchange reaction. To further understand the kinetic behavior of this copolymerization, we first tracked the growth of initial species from a valine/lactic acid mixture in a closed system reactor.

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Enzyme-catalyzed polymerization in vitro has gained considerable attention in the last two decades as an efficient tool in the polymerization of various monomers, such as saccharides, esters, phenols, and aromatic anilines; however, the polymerization of vinyl monomers using enzymes has been more limited, perhaps due to the hydrophobicity of most common vinyl monomers. Enzyme-initiated miniemulsion polymerization is demonstrated herein as a way to polymerize hydrophobic vinyl monomers such as styrene. By application of enzyme-initiated radical polymerization in miniemulsion, stable poly(styrene) latexes are prepared with a particle size near 50 nm.

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The colloidal stability of miniemulsions in the presence of RAFT or other control agents for controlled free radical polymerization is examined. A derivation, based on Lifshitz-Slyozov-Wagner (LSW) theory, is proposed here to evaluate the effect of a RAFT agent on the diffusional stability of the miniemulsions before the onset of polymerization. Results indicate that, depending on the hydrophobicity of the control agent, its presence may augment or detract from the effectiveness of the costabilizer in preventing diffusional instability due to Ostwald ripening.

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This paper reports an improved headspace gas chromatographic (GC) technique for determination of monomer solubilities in water. The method is based on a multiple headspace extraction GC technique developed previously [X.S.

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This study demonstrated a full evaporation (FE) headspace gas chromatographic technique for the determination of residual monomer in methyl methacrylate (MMA) polymer latex. A very small amount (approximately 10-30 mg) of latex was added to a sealed headspace sample vial (20 ml). A near-complete monomer mass transfer from both liquid (aqueous phase) and solid phase (polymer particles) to the vapor phase (headspace) is achieved within 5 min at a temperature of 110 degrees C.

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