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Vinyl acetate is an organic compound with the formula CH3COOCH=CH2. A colorless liquid with a pungent odor, it is the precursor to polyvinyl acetate (PVA), an important polymer in industry. Like many industrially significant compounds, vinyl acetate has numerous names and acronymns.
PreparationThe major industrial route involves the reaction of ethylene and acetic acid with oxygen in the presence of a palladium catalyst.[1]
But also byproducts are also generated:
Vinyl acetate is also prepared by the gas-phase addition of acetic acid to acetylene.[2] PolymerizationIt can be polymerized, either by itself to make polyvinyl acetate or with other monomers to prepare copolymers such as ethylene-vinyl acetate. Due to the instability of the radical, attempts to control the polymerization via most 'living/controlled' radical processes have proved problematic. However, RAFT (or more specifically MADIX) polymerization offers a convenient method of controlling the synthesis of PVA by the addition of a xanthate chain transfer agent. Other derivativesVinyl acetate undergoes many of the reactions anticipated for an alkene and an ester. Bromine adds to give the dibromide. Hydrogen halides add to give 1-haloethyl acetates, which cannot be generate by other methods because of the non-availability of the corresponding halo-alcohols. Acetic acid adds in the presence of palladium catalysts to give ethylidene diacetate, CH3CH(OAc)2. It undergoes transesterification with a variety of carboxylic acids.[3] The alkene also undergoes Diels-Alder and 2+2 cycloadditions. Possible label as "toxic" in CanadaDue to research done by the International Agency for Research on Cancer that the substance could be linked to cancer in lab rats, a draft report due from the Government of Canada may label it toxic, along with as many as sixteen other substances.[4] References
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