141913-26-0Relevant articles and documents
Probing the reactivity of photoinitiators for free radical polymerization: Time-resolved infrared spectroscopic study of benzoyl radicals
Colley, Christopher S.,Grills, David C.,Besley, Nicholas A.,Jockusch, Steffen,Matousek, Pavel,Parker, Anthony W.,Towrie, Michael,Turro, Nicholas J.,Gill, Peter M. W.,George, Michael W.
, p. 14952 - 14958 (2007/10/03)
A series of substituted benzoyl radicals has been generated by laser flash photolysis of α-hydroxy ketones, α-amino ketones, and acyl and bis(acyl)phosphine oxides, all of which are used commercially as photoinitiators in free radical polymerizations. The benzoyl radicals have been studied by fast time-resolved infrared spectroscopy. The absolute rate constants for their reaction with n-butylacrylate, thiophenol, bromotrichloromethane and oxygen were measured in acetonitrile solution. The rate constants of benzoyl radical addition to n-butylacrylate range from 1.3 x 105 to 5.5 x 105 M-1 s-1 and are about 2 orders of magnitude lower than for the n-butylacrylate addition to the counterradicals that are produced by α-cleavage of the investigated ketones. Density functional theoretical calculations have been performed in order to rationalize the observed reactivities of the initiating radicals. Calculations of the phosphorus-centered radicals generated by photolysis of an acyl and bis(acyl)phosphine oxide suggest that P atom Mulliken spin populations are an indicator of the relative reactivities of the phosphorus-centered radicals. The α-cleavage of (2,4,6-trimethylbenzoyl)phosphine oxide was studied by picosecond pump-probe and nanosecond step-scan time-resolved infrared spectroscopy. The results support a mechanism in which the α-cleavage occurs from the triplet excited state that has a lifetime less than or equal to the singlet excited state.