| Literature DB >> 24204400 |
Abstract
Manufactured polymer materials are used in increasingly demanding applications, but their lifetime is strongly influenced by environmental conditions. In particular, weathering and ageing leads to dramatic changes in the properties of the polymers, which results in decreased service life and limited usage. Despite the heavy reliance of our society on polymers, the mechanism of their degradation upon exposure to environmental oxidants is barely understood. In this work, model systems of important structural motifs in commercial high-performing polyesters were used to study the reaction with the night-time free radical oxidant NO3 (•) in the absence and presence of other radical and non-radical oxidants. Identification of the products revealed 'hot spots' in polyesters that are particularly vulnerable to attack by NO3 (•) and insight into the mechanism of oxidative damage by this environmentally important radical. It is suggested that both intermediates as well as products of these reactions are potentially capable of promoting further degradation processes in polyesters under environmental conditions.Entities:
Keywords: environmental oxidants; free radicals; nitrate radicals; polyester degradation; product studies; reaction mechanisms
Year: 2013 PMID: 24204400 PMCID: PMC3817593 DOI: 10.3762/bjoc.9.225
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Org Chem ISSN: 1860-5397 Impact factor: 2.883
Scheme 1Generation of NO3• (a) in the atmosphere, (b) under experimental conditions.
Figure 1Polyester-model systems studied in this work.
Scheme 2Products of the reaction of polyester model compounds 1–3 with NO3• in the absence of other radical and non-radical oxidants.
Scheme 3Proposed mechanism for the reaction of m-toluic acid neopentyl ester (3) with NO3• in the absence of radical and non-radical oxidants.
Scheme 4Products of the reaction of polyester-model compounds 1–3 with NO3• in presence of NO2•, O3, and O2.
Scheme 5Proposed mechanism for the reaction of m-toluic acid neopentyl ester (3) with NO3• in presence of NO2•, O3 and O2.