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Note: The preliminary program is listed below the list of symposia. Please check the ACS web site for the final version and scheduling of papers. Also some special fonts may not print out correctly.

2008 Fall NATIONAL ACS MEETING
Philadelphia (Aug. 17-21, 2008)
Program Meeting Chair: Christine Landry-Coltrain
Deadline for Abstracts and Polymer Preprints: March 17, 2008.*

*for general papers and some symposia (some symposium organizers may set an earlier deadline).

ACS-wide Thematic Programming
Overall Theme: Chemistry for Health: Catalyzing Translational Research; Sub-theme: Drug design, Drug delivery, and Drug assay

Aerogels, Foams and Other Nanoporous Materials (.pdf file)
Mary Ann Meador, NASA Glenn Research Center, phone: 216-433-3221, fax: 216-977-7132, maryann.meador@nasa.gov, Nicholas Leventis, Department of Chemistry, University of Missouri-Rolla, Rolla, MO 65409, Phone: 573-341-4391, Fax: 573-341-6033, leventis@umr.edu, David A. Schiraldi, Associate Professor, Macromolecular Science & Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland OH 44106-7202, tel 216-368-4243, fax 216-368-4202 , david.schiraldi@case.edu.

5th Controlled/living Radical Polymerization Symposium
Krzysztof Matyjaszewski, J.C. Warner University Professor of Natural Sciences, Department of Chemistry, Carnegie Mellon University, 4400 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA, Phone: 412-268-3209 (office) FAX: 412-268-6897, Email: km3b@andrew.cmu.edu.

8th International Biorelated Polymers Symposium
Ray Ottenbrite, Department of Chemistry, Virginia Commonwealth U, Richmond, VA 23284, (804) 828-7513, fax (804) 367-8599, ottenbrite@vcu.org; Carmen Scholz, Department of Chemistry, University of Alabama in Huntsville, John Wright Drive, MSB 333, Huntsville, AL 35899, Phone: 256-824-6188, Fax: 256-824-6349, cscholz@chemistry.uah.edu.

Carbohydrate-Polymer Hybrids: Biomaterials and Therapeutics, Cosponsored with CARB
Newell Washburn, Departments of Chemistry and Biomedical Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University, 700 Technology Drive, Pittsburgh, PA 15219; (412) 268-2130, washburn@andrew.cmu.edu; Neil R. Cameron, Department of Chemistry, University of Durham, South Road, Durham, U.K., DH1 3LE, Tel. +44 191 3342008, Fax. +44 191 3844737, n.r.cameron@durham.ac.uk; Heather D. Maynard, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and California Nanosystems Institute, University of California, Los Angeles, 607 Charles E. Young Drive East, Los Angeles, CA 90095, Phone: 310-267-5162, maynard@chem.ucla.edu .

Polymeric Delivery for Therapeutics(pdf file) cosponsored with COLL
Sarah E. Morgan, School of Polymers and High Performance Materials,, University of Southern Mississippi, 118 College Dr., #10076, Hattiesburg, MS 39406; 601-266-5296, sarah.morgan@usm.edu; Bob Lochhead, The Schoolof Polymers and High Performance Materials, The University of Southern Mississippi, 118 CollegeDrive, Hattiesburg MS 39406, Phone: 601 266 5945, robert.lochhead@usm.edu.

Microwave-Assisted Chemistry: Organic and Polymer Synthesis, Cosponsored with ORGN
Ulrich S. Schubert, Laboratory of Macromolecular Chemistry and Nanoscience, Eindhoven University of Technology and Dutch Polymer Institute (DPI), P.O. Box 513, Eindhoven 5600 MB Netherlands, u.s.schubert@tue.nl, Phone: +31 40 247 4083, Richard Hoogenboom, Laboratory of Macromolecular Chemistry and Nanoscience, Eindhoven University of Technology and Dutch Polymer Institute, PO Box 513, Eindhoven 5600 MB Netherlands, r.hoogenboom@tue.nl, Phone: +31 40 247 5303; C. Oliver Kappe, Christian Doppler Laboratory for Microwave Chemistry, Karl-Franzens-University of Graz, Heinrichstrasse 28, Graz A-8010 Austria, Phone: +43-316-3805352, Fax: +43-316-3809840, oliver.kappe@uni-graz.at.

Polymers in Flat Panel Display Technologies, cosponsored with PMSE
Jehuda Greener, Flat Panel Display Technologies, Rohm and Haas Electronic Materials, P.O.Box 60799, Rochester, NY 14606, Phone: 585-719-2435, JGreener@rohmhaas.com. Jason Brooks, Universal Display Corporation, 375 Phillips Blvd, Ewing, NJ 08618, Phone: 609-671-0980, Fax: 609-671-0995, jbrooks@universaldisplay.com.

Conducting Polymers, Molecular Wires, and Devices: A Tribute to Alan MacDiarmid
Wayne E. Jones Jr., Department of Chemisty, Institute for Materials Research, and Center for Research on Environmental Systems, State University of New York, Vestal Parkway East, Binghamton, NY 13902, Phone: 607-777-2421, Fax: 607-777-4478, wjones@binghamton.edu; Samson A. Jenekhe, Department of Chemical Engineering and Department of Chemistry, University of Washington, Benson Hall, Box 351750, Seattle, WA 98195-1750, Phone: 206-543-5525, Fax: 206-685-3451, jenekhe@u.washington.edu.

Formulating Polymeric Materials in Consumer Products
Robert Lochhead, The School of Polymers and High Performance Materials, University of Southern Mississippi, 118 College Drive, Hattiesburg, MS 39406, Phone: 601-266-5945, Fax: 601-266-5504, robert.lochhead@usm.edu. Sarah E. Morgan, School of Polymers and High Performance Materials, University of Southern Mississippi, 118 College Dr., #10076, Hattiesburg, MS 39406, Phone: 601-266-5296, sarah.morgan@usm.edu.

Heroes of Chemistry in Materials Advanced Applications (co-sponsored with PMSE and ACS Corporate Associates)
Christine Landry-Coltrain, Kodak Research Laboratories, Eastman Kodak Company, Build. 82/Floor 6, Rochester, NY 14450-2109, Phone: 585-722-3683, christine.landry-coltrain@kodak.com. Abhimanyu Patil, ExxonMobil Research & Engineering Company, 1545 Route 22 East, Annandale, NJ 08801, Phone: 908-730-2639, Fax: 908-730-2536, abhimanyu.o.patil@exxonmobil.com

Hybrid Nanomaterials: Impact on Modern Materials and Opportunities for Industrial Applications
Bhanu P. S. Chauhan, Engineered Nanomaterials Laboratory, Department of Chemistry and Physics, William Paterson University, 300, Pompton Road, Wayne, NJ 07470-2103, Phone: 973-720-2470, Fax: 973-720-2338, chauhanbps@wpunj.edu. Richard Durand Jr., Sun Chemical Corporation, 631 Central Avenue, Carlstadt, NJ 07072, Phone: 888-786-4657, Fax: 201-933-5658, richard.durand@sunchemical.com. Jason Rouse, Sun Chemical Corporation, 631 Central Avenue, Carlstadt, NJ 07072, Phone: 888-786-4657, Fax: 201-933-5658, jason.rouse@na.sunchem.com.

Organic Thin Films for Photonics Applications (pdf file)
Warren N. Herman, Laboratory for Physical Sciences, University of Maryland, College Park, 8050 Greenmead Dr, College Park, MD 20740, Phone: 301-935-6474, Fax: 301-935-6723, herman@lps.umd.edu; Stephen H. Foulger, School of Materials Science & Engineering, Clemson University, 262 Sirrine Hall, Clemson, SC 29634, Phone: 864-656-3345, foulger@clemson.edu; Steven R. Flom, Optical Sciences Division, Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC 20375, Phone: 202-767-3795, flom@nrl.navy.mil.

Paul J. Flory Polymer Educational Award (in honor of Frank Kelley)
William J. MacKnight, Polymer Science and Engineering Department, Silvio O. Conte National Center for Polymer Research, University of Massachusetts, 120 Governors Drive, Amherst, MA 01003, Phone: 413-577-1412, Fax: 413-545-0082, wmacknight@polysci.umass.edu. Richard J. Farris, Polymer Science and Engineering Department, Silvio O. Conte National Center for Polymer Research, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, MA 01003, Phone: 413-577-1312, Fax: 413-545-0082, rjfarris@polysci.umass.edu.

2008 Industrial Polymer Scientist Award in Honor of S. Richard Turner
Timothy E. Long, Department of Chemistry, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA 24061-0212, Phone: (540)231-2480, telong@vt.edu

General Papers: New Concepts, Polymer Synthesis, Polymer Characterization, Nanomaterials, Functional Materials
D. Garcia, Arkema Inc., 900 First Avenue, King of Prussia, PA 19406, 610-878-6731, e-mail: dana.garcia@arkemagroup.com.

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POLY

POLY-downloaded 6/30/2008, so this is the ÒtentativeÓ final version; room locations may change so make sure to consult the official web version prior to the meeting.

DIVISION OF POLYMER CHEMISTRY

Program, 236th ACS National Meeting, Philadelphia, PA, August 17-21, 2008

C. Landry-Coltrain, Program Chair

SUNDAY MORNING

 Section A

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm A

5th Controlled/living Radical Polymerization Symposium

Tutorial — Fundamentals of Controlled Radical Polymerization

Cosponsored by HEALTHà
K. Matyjaszewski,
Organizer
M. Buback and T. Fukuda,
Presiding

8:20 — Introductory Remarks.

8:30 —1. Current status of controlled/living radical polymerization. K. Matyjaszewski

9:15 —2. Propagation and termination of radicals: Detailed analysis of polymerization kinetics via pulsed-laser-assisted techniques and high-pressure experiments. M. Buback

10:00 —3. What can a polymer scientist learn from a synthetic radical chemist and vice versa? A. Studer

10:45 — Intermission.

10:55 —4. Science of concentrated polymer brushes. T. Fukuda

11:40 —5. Using CRP tools to introduce peptides and proteins into the world of polymer science. H. G. Bšrner

 Section B

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Salon 5/6

General Papers: New Concepts, Polymer Synthesis, Polymer Characterization, Nanomaterials, Functional Materials


D. Garcia, Organizer
M. Scandone,
Organizer, Presiding

8:30 —6. Synthesis of semiconducting nanoparticles. C. T. Adkins, H. Muchalski, M. J. Cohen, E. Harth

8:50 —7. Morphology and thermal behavior of modified Maghnia bentonite/poly(styrene-co-methacrylic acid)/poly(isobutyl methacrylate-co-4-vinylpyridine) nanocomposites. S. Djadoun Sr., A. Habi

9:10 —8. Nanocomposites from silica nanoparticles polynorbornenes with pendant cholesterols. T. A. P. Seery, S -K. Ahn, D. Penaloza, D. J. Sandberg, R. Kasi

9:30 —9. Functional thin film nanoassemblies for electrochemical energy conversion devices. A. A. Argun, J. N. Ashcraft, I. J. Gomez, M. A. Esquivel, P. T. Hammond

9:50 —10. Polyelectrolyte decorated superparamagnetic nanoparticles. Q. Yuan, G. L. Baker

10:10 —11. Chemometric analysis and visualization tools for IR spectral searching. M. Scandone, D. Garcia

10:30 —12. Ultrathin photopatternable polymer layers as platforms for generation of tailored polymer surface chemistries. I. Blakey, A. K. Whittaker

10:50 —13. Controlled carbocationic polymerization of bicyclo[2,2,1]hepta-2,5-diene. N. Mijid Taylor, R. M. Peetz

 Section C

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm D

Polymeric Delivery for Therapeutics

Drug Delivery

Cosponsored by COLL and HEALTHà
R. Lochhead,
Organizer
S. E. Morgan,
Organizer, Presiding

8:30 —14. Acrylate copolymers for drug eluting stents. V. DavŽ, G. Papandreou, B. White

9:00 —15. Polymer/dendrimer supported organoplatinum drugs. B. A. Howell

9:25 —16. Raft synthesis of functional poly(ethylene glycol)-based acrylic copolymers and their conjugation to desferrioxamine for chelation therapy. N. A. A. Rossi, I. Mustafa, M. D. Scott, J. K. Jackson, H. M. Burt, J. N. Kizhakkedathu

9:55 — Intermission.

10:05 —17. Free volume of polyelectrolyte multilayer films comprising nanoblended layers. S. Pas, J. F. Quinn, F. Caruso, A. J. Hill

10:35 —18. A novel delivery system for the bioregulatory agent nitric oxide. H. A. Liu, H. Osuna, C. Miller, K. J. Balkus Jr.

11:00 —19. Engineering zein films with controlled hydrophilicity through alternative solvents and UV/ozone treatment. K. Shi, J. L. Kokini, Q. Huang

11:25 —20. Novel nanotechnology platform: Design and synthesis. M. K. Pandey, R. Tyagi, V. B. Tucci, V. Kumar, B. Gupta, S. K. Sharma, J. Kumar, V. S. Parmar, A. C. Watterson

 Section D

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm C

Microwave-Assisted Chemistry: Organic and Polymer Synthesis

Tutorial

Cosponsored by ORGN and PMSE
R. Hoogenboom and C. O. Kappe,
Organizers
R. S. Varma,
Presiding
U. S. Schubert,
Organizer, Presiding

8:30 — Introductory Remarks.

8:45 —21. Introduction to microwave chemistry – a tutorial. C. O. Kappe

10:40 — Intermission.

11:00 —22. Microwave-assisted polymer synthesis – a tutorial. R. Hoogenboom

 Section E

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm B

Carbohydrate-Polymer Hybrids: Biomaterials and Therapeutics

Glycopolymer Therapeutics

Cosponsored by CARB and HEALTHà
H. D. Maynard,
Organizer
N. R. Cameron and N. R. Washburn,
Organizers, Presiding

8:00 — Introductory Remarks.

8:05 —23. Site-directed conjugation of clicked glycopolymers to form glycoprotein mimics. D. M. Haddleton, J. Geng, G. Mantovani, J. Lindqvist

8:35 —24. Multivalent glyconanoparticles from RAFT polymers: Synthesis and characterization. A. L. Parry, S. G. Spain, J. Ellis, N. R. Cameron

8:55 —25. RAFT polymerization: Toward acid or thiol degradable crosslinked glycopolymers micelles. L. Zhang, S. Pearson, M. H. Stenzel

9:25 —26. One pot approach for the establishment of dendritic polymers with various oligosaccharide architectures. D. Appelhans, H. Komber, B. Voit, A. F. ThŸnemann, B. Brutschy, N. Morgner, S. Richter, R. Bienert

9:45 —27.
One-pot CuAAC/LRP protocols: Toward "click processes"? G. Mantovani, J. Lindqvist, J. Geng, D. M. Haddleton

10:05 — Intermission.

10:20 —28. Controlling cellular responses to materials via the use of polysaccharide-derivatized polymers. K. L. Kiick

10:50 —29. Synthesis of thiol-reactive glycopolymers by ATRP. V. Vazquez Dorbatt, H. D. Maynard

11:10 —30. Well-defined synthetic glycopolymers as multivalent ligands for biorecognition. J. Lindqvist, G. Mantovani, J. Geng, D. M. Haddleton

11:30 —31. Characterization of the role of charge and linker chemistry in the inhibition of bacterial toxins by glycopeptides. R. Maheshwari, K. L. Kiick

11:50 —32. One-pot synthesis of neoglycopolymer by stepwise "click chemistry" and living radical polymerization. J. Geng, G. Mantovani, J. Lindqvist, D. H. Haddleton

SUNDAY AFTERNOON

 Section A

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm A

5th Controlled/living Radical Polymerization Symposium

Atom Transfer Radical Polymerization

Cosponsored by HEALTHà
K. Matyjaszewski,
Organizer
M. Sawamoto and R. Poli,
Presiding

1:30 —33. System design and materials synthesis via transition metal-catalyzed living radical polymerization. M. Sawamoto, T. Terashima, M. Ouchi

1:55 —34. Iron-based atom transfer radical polymerization of styrene derivatives. A. Sen, R. Luo

2:20 —35. Catalyst performance in atom transfer radical polymerization: A closer look. N. V. Tsarevsky, W. A. Braunecker, W. Tang, Y. Kwak, K. Matyjaszewski

2:45 —36. Atom transfer radical addition (ATRA) catalyzed by ppm amounts of copper complexes. T. Pintauer

3:10 —37. Atom transfer radical polymerization of vinyl acetate by copper halide/terpyridine catalyst. H. Tang, M. Radosz, Y. Shen

3:35 — Intermission.

3:45 —38. Controlled radical polymerization by use of half-sandwich chromium complexes. U. Baisch, Y. Champouret, R. Poli, L. Tang, J. L. Conway, K. M. Smith

4:10 —39. ATRP of methyl methacrylate catalyzed by novel homo- and heterobimetallic ruthenium complexes. A. Demonceau, Y. Borguet, S. Delfosse, X. Sauvage, L. Delaude, L. Bareille, P. Le Gendre, C. Mo•se

4:35 —40.
Stereospecific living radical polymerization for simultaneous control of molecular weight and tacticity. M. Kamigaito, K. Satoh

5:00 —41. The color of quasiliving atom transfer radical polymerization. I. Szanka, T. F—nagy, B. Iv‡n, G. Kali, G. Szarka, M. Szesztay, K. VerebŽlyi

 Section B

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Salon 5/6

General Papers: New Concepts, Polymer Synthesis, Polymer Characterization, Nanomaterials, Functional Materials


D. Garcia, Organizer

H. Liu, Organizer, Presiding

1:00 —42. Click chemistry as a versatile synthetic tool to diblock copolymers based on polypeptides. W. Agut, D. Taton, S. Lecommandoux

1:20 —43. Evaluation of novel absorbable cyanoacrylate adhesives for medical applications. H. Liu, C. Vailhe, S. Gonzalez

1:40 —44. Hybrid poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) and dendritic polymer hydrogels as scaffolds for corneal tissue engineering. A. M. Oelker, M. W. Grinstaff

2:00 —45. Synthesis and characterization of [2,4-dinitrophenyl (DNP)] functionalized polypyrroles: Conductive polymers with biospecific binding capacity toward mast cells. I. M. Khan, D. Reuven, B. Sannigrahi, B. Baird, D. Sil, H. G. Craighead, L. Bellan

2:20 —46. New well-defined polystyrene star-shaped or cross-linked polymer based on macromonomers and octafunctional silsesquioxanes. H. Harris, B. Nohra, O. Gavat, P. J. Lutz

2:40 —47. Poly(triol α-ketoglutarate) as biodegradable, chemoselective, and mechanically tunable elastomers. M. N. Yousaf, D. G. Barrett

3:00 —48. Responsive hyperbranched polymers: Shape-persistent double-hydrophilic block copolymers. K. J. Thurecht, C. Alexander, S. M. Howdle, D. J. Irvine

3:20 —49. Synthesis of fluorescent conjugated polymer with varying percentage loading of dipyrrolequinoxaline receptor for fluoride and cyanide anions detection. C. N. Malele, S. S. Pinnock, A. Eshraghi, W. E. Jones Jr

3:40 —50.
Improved synthesis and chemical modification of a beta-O-4 type artificial lignin polymer. D. M. Wallace, N. Brauner, W. Niceswanger, P. M. Iovine

4:00 —51. Use of crosslinked poly(orthosilicate)s as organic solvent absorbent. H. Bulbul Sonmez, K. Karadag, G. Onaran

 Section C

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm D

Polymeric Delivery for Therapeutics

Nanoparticles and Imaging

Cosponsored by COLL and HEALTHà
S. E. Morgan,
Organizer
R. Lochhead,
Organizer, Presiding

1:30 —52. Drug delivery and imaging using nanoparticles produced by block-copolymer directed Flash NanoPrecipitation. R. K. Prud'homme

2:30 —53. Supramolecular encapsulation of guest molecules in macromolecular carriers. S. M. Grayson, D. M. Eugene, B. A. Laurent, M. D. Giles

3:00 —54.
Polymer modified nanoparticles for targeted imaging and therapy. S. G. Boyes, M. D. Rowe, W. Svoboda, W. Maksaereekul, C -C. G. Chang

3:30 — Intermission.

3:40 —55. Synthesis, modeling and relaxivities of contrast agents for MRI. P. Huffstetler, W. Miles, C. Reinholz, J. D. Goff, M. R. J. Carroll, R. C. Woodward, T. St. Pierre, R. M. Davis, J. S. Riffle

4:05 —56. On-demand drug delivery from polymeric implants by external triggering. R. Hoogenboom, M. A. M. E. Vertommen, S. A. Rovers, D. T. A. Van Asseldonk, J. T. F. Keurentjes

4:35 —57.
Prodrug strategies for stable drug nanoparticles. M. Herrera, V. Kumar, R. K. Prud'homme

5:00 —58. Synthesis of thermally-responsive gold-decorated nanostructures from block copolymers synthesized by RAFT polymerization. A. E. Smith, X. Xu, C. L. McCormick

 Section D

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm C

Microwave-Assisted Chemistry: Organic and Polymer Synthesis

Organic Synthesis

Cosponsored by ORGN and PMSE
U. S. Schubert and R. Hoogenboom,
Organizers
N. E. Leadbeater,
Presiding
C. O. Kappe,
Organizer, Presiding

1:00 —59. Microwave heating as a safe, versatile tool for reactions involving gaseous reagents. N. E. Leadbeater, C. M. Kormos

1:35 —60. Microwave-assisted synthesis of imidazolinium salts. A. Demonceau, M. Hans, L. Delaude

2:00 —61. Microwave-assisted syntheses of heterocyclic compounds. D. Armstrong

2:25 —62. Microwave-assisted tandem processes for the synthesis of N-heterocycles. M. Abid, B. Torok, X. Huang

2:50 — Intermission.

3:10 —63. Nonthermal microwave effects in organic synthesis: Myth or reality? C. O. Kappe, J. M. Kremsner

3:45 —64. Synthesis and reactions of calixarenes using microwave irradiation. S. P. Bew

4:10 —65. Upscaling the synthesis of 1-butyl-3-methyl-imidazolium chloride under microwave irradiation. T. Erdmenger, R. M. Paulus, R. Hoogenboom, U. S. Schubert

4:35 —66.
Aminocarbonylation by a pressurized continuous flow reactor and comparison with batch-type techniques. Z. Szekelyhidi, C. Csaba, B. Borcsek, I. Kovacs, Z. Bajko, U. Laszlo, F. Darvas

 Section E

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm B

Carbohydrate-Polymer Hybrids: Biomaterials and Therapeutics

Glycopolymer Biomaterials

Cosponsored by CARB and HEALTHà
N. R. Cameron,
Organizer
N. R. Washburn and H. D. Maynard,
Organizers, Presiding

1:30 —67. Glycosylated chemokine antagonists inhibit aneurysm formation. E. L. Chaikof

2:00 —68. Polysaccharide hydrogels with controlled temporal structures. C. Chung, S. Sahoo, C -H. Chou, J. A. Burdick

2:30 —69. Bioresorbable hyaluronic acid hydrogels for tissue engineering applications. S. A. Bencherif, A. Srinivasan, A. Jiang, J. O. Hollinger, K. Matyjaszewski, N. R. Washburn

2:50 — Intermission.

3:05 —70. Polysaccharide-poly(oxyethylene)-based hydrogel interpenetrating networks for resorbable implantable devices. A. Coury, K. Greenawalt, H. Kramer, R. Corazzini, J. Colt, K. Skinner, L -P. Yu, T. Jozefiak

3:35 —71. Heparin-containing hydrogels for modulating endothelial cell responses. T. Nie, A. D. Baldwin, R. E. Akins Jr., K. L. Kiick

3:55 —72. Glycopolymer contrast agents for fluorescence and MRI detection of DNA delivery. J. M. Bryson, K. M. Fichter, J -H. Lee, W -J. Chu, T. M. Reineke

4:25 —73.
Hydroxypropyl cellulose as multifunctional initiator for controlled polymerizations. E. …stmark, D. Nystršm, J. Lindqvist, A. Carlmark, E. Malmstršm

4:45 —74. Surface functionalization of quantum dots with well-defined biotinylated glycopolymers. R. Narain

 

Young Industrial Investigators

Sponsored by ORGN, Cosponsored by MEDI and POLY

SUNDAY EVENING

 Section A

Pennsylvania Convention Center -- Hall C

General Papers: New Concepts, Polymer Synthesis, Polymer Characterization, Nanomaterials, Functional Materials


D. Garcia, Organizer

6:00 - 8:00

75. Ionic self-assembled multilayers in electroactive-polymer actuators. R. Montazami, V. Jain, S. Liu, Q. Zhang, J. R. Heflin

76. Glylons-generic name for hydroxilated polyamides. I. I. Negulescu, P. S. Russo, W. H. Daly, C. Rosu, R. Laine

77. Size exclusion chromatography of bioderived poly(hydroxy alkanoate)s. I. I. Negulescu, R. Cueto, M. G. Wing, B. Stevens, K. Rusch, A. Jacobs

78. Reaction of chitosan with trityl chloride and phthalic anhydride in homogeneous ionic liquid solutions. C. Stefanescu, W. H. Daly, I. I. Negulescu

79. X-ray diffraction characterization of solid nanocomposites containing laponite and montmorillonite. E. A. Stefanescu, I. I. Negulescu, W. H. Daly

80. Solute responsiveness of stimuli-responsive polymers in the solution and solid state. H. Fu, K -S. Liao, D. E. Bergbreiter

81. Synthesis and structural characterisics of perfluorocyclobutane(pfcb) and polyethylene glycol(peg) block polymers. D. K. Brown, D. W. Smith Jr.

82. Preparation of epichlorohydrin-crosslinked carboxymethyl starch as a novel biodegradable superabsorbent polymer. C. Katepetch, R. Rujiravanit

83. Morphological control of segmented polyurethane/silica nanocomposites by tailoring crystallization of hard/soft segments. M. A. Hood, B. Wang, J. J. LaScala, J. M. Sands, F. L. Beyer, J. A. Orlicki, A. J. Hsieh, M. VanLandingham, C. Y. Li

84. Polyethylene-clay nanocomposites by in situ polymerization with immobilized iron catalysts. L. P. Stubbs

85. Morphology and mechanical properties of wheat gluten/thiol-functionalized alumina blends. J. Dong, D. Wu, L. M. McGrath, R. S. Parnas, A. D. Asandei

86. Modular design of photoregulated chiroptical switching elements: Fluorine-substituted oligomers. G. D. Jaycox

87. A negative-type photosensitive poly(benzoxazole) based on poly(o-hydroxy amide), a novel ester-type cross-linker, and a photobase generator. K. Mizogchi, M. Ueda

88. Coordinative helical nanoporous polymer fabricated by template polymerization of hydrogen-bonded columnar liquid crystal. S. Ishihara, Y. Furuki, S. Takeoka

89. Ionic liquid 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium cyanamide (bmim [dca]) as a solvent and catalyst for acylation of maltodextrin. A. Biswas, R. L. Shogren, J. L. Willett

90. Synthesis of novel rod-coil polymers bearing cholesterol mesogens and the study of their liquid crystallinity. Y. Zhou, R. Kasi

91. MALDI-TOF/TOF MS measurements of PMMA. C. R. Becer, A. Baumgaertel, M. Gottschaldt, U. S. Schubert

92. Melt characterization of ultrahigh molecular weight polyethylene fibers using samples restrained to constant length. A. Wampler

93. Synthesis and characterization of model materials as part of the "microscale polymer processing 2" project. P. Chambon, C. M. Fernyhough, A. J. Ryan

94. Semifluorinated aryl ether network polymers. K. N. Tackett II, S. T. Iacono, D. W. Smith Jr.

95. Heterogeneous Ti(IV) catalysts for the preparation of epoxy alocohols. X. Yang, A. W. Jensen

96. Extended dissolution studies of cellulose in ionic liquids. T. Erdmenger, J. Vitz, C. Haensch, U. S. Schubert

97. Facile method for the synthesis of cleavable block copolymers. N. Chikkannagari, A. Klaikherd, S. Thayumanavan

98. Facile synthesis of aromatic polyamide dendrimers with trifluoroacetamide groups at their periphery via a convergent method. K. Endo, Y. Ito, M. Ueda

99. Integrated fluorescent polymer systems for optical applications. T. S. Lee, T. H. Kim, C. K. Kwak, J. H. Lee

100.
Light emitting conjugated polymers incorporating thiophene-phenylene monomer. G. Balaji, V. Sivamurugan, S. Valiyaveettil

101. Novel copolymers of 2-phenyl-1,1-dicyanoethylene with 4-fluoro- and pentafluorostyrene. G. B. Kharas, E. Hanawa, B. L. Hill

102. Novel poly(dimethylsiloxane-urea)-montmorillonite nanocomposites. I. I. Nugay, E. Yilgor, I. Yilgor

103. Phase behavior of regioregular poly(3-alkylthiophene)/polystyrene blends. Y. Lee, J. K. Kim

104. Polycondensation of propargylic carbonate derivatives and bisphenols catalyzed by palladium catalyst. T. Koizumi, H. Nishino, N. Nishioka, T. Ishida

105. Synthesis and characterization of fluorine-contained polyimides with the diamondoid pendants on the backbone. Z. Bai, E. Fossum, B. E. Moore, T. D. Dang

106.
Synthesis of aramides by polycondensation of aromatic dicarboxylic acids with aromatic diamines containing ether linkages. Y. Shoji, K. Mizoguchi, M. Ueda

107. Synthesis of magnetite nanoparticles in the presence of a polymer based on ionic liquid. Y. Zhai, Q. Zhang, R. Li, A. Dong, F. Liu, G. Gao

108. Water-soluble poly(para-phenylene): Synthesis and FRET effect for peptide sensing. C. K. Kwak, K -O. Kim, D. M. Kim, T. S. Lee

109.
Effects of sonication on the thermal behaviors of nanocomposites containing bismaleimides and carbon nanofibers/nanotubes. D. H. Wang, W. C. Lee, L -S. Tan

110. Methacrylate nanoparticles by crosslinking of block copolymer micelles in organic solvents. S. Tea, F. Schacher, A. H. E. Mueller

111. Improving compatibilization of wheat gluten blends by in situ silica particles synthesis. S. Hemsri, C. P. Simpson, L. M. McGrath, R. S. Parnas, A. D. Asandei

112. Click polyester: Synthesis of polyesters containing triazole units in the main chain via click chemistry. A. Takasu, Y. Nagao

113. Synthesis and characterization of hydrophilic silicone copolymers and macromonomers for opthalmic application. D. Pavlovic, J. G. Linhardt, J. F. KŸnzler, D. A. Shipp

114. Stabilization of nanoparticles by macromolecules combining phosphorus dendrimers and 15-membered triolefinic azamacrocycles. G. Franc, E. Badetti, M. Moreno-Ma–as, J -P. Majoral, R -M. Sebastian, A -M. Caminade

115.
A study of hydrogen bonding in poly(styrene-co-methacrylic acid)/poly(styrene-co-4-vinylpyridine) systems. S. Djadoun Sr., Z. Benabdelghani Sr., K. Elmiloudi Sr., A. Etxeberria Sr.

116. Novel nanoparticles of polyolefin-PEG AB3 block copolymers. K. Matoishi, S. Nakatsuka, N. Nagai, T. Fujita

117. Inverse gas chromatography as an alternative method for the analysis and characterization of polymers. Z. Y. Al-Saigh, A. Al-Ghamdi

118. Deviation from Bovey model by solvent in free radical polymerization of acrylate. H. Tanaka, K. Soga

119. Novel functionalization of poly(phenylene ether) at each monomer unit via poly(addition-condensation) mechanism. Y. Segawa, W. Sinananwanich, M. Ueda

120. Synthesis of a hyperbranched polythioketal with 100% degree of branching. W. Sinananwanich, M. Ueda

121. Unsaturated polyimide prepared under mild reaction conditions by nucleophilic substitution reaction through C-N bond formation. A. Parthiban, H. Yu, C. L. L. Chai

122. Synthesis and characterization of poly(n-butylacrylate) macroinitiators and diblock copolymers of poly(n-butylacrylate-b-caprolactone). A. Parthiban, A. Likhitsup, H. Yu, C. L. L. Chai

123. Synthesis and characterization of PMMA based macroinitiators and AB type diblock copolymersof poly(methyl methacrylate-b-caprolactone). A. Parthiban, A. Likhitsup, H. Yu, C. L. L. Chai

124. Living ring opening polymerization of ε-caprolactone by a Ti benzyloxide derived from the Cp2TiCl SET reduction of benzaldehyde. A. D. Asandei, Y. Chen, O. Adebolu, C. P. Simpson

125. Copolymerization of amino acid functionalized norbornene monomers: Synthesis of amphiphilic block copolymers forming reverse micelles. S. Sutthasupa, F. Sanda, T. Masuda

126. Nanocomposites containing gold nanoparticles bonded with multifunctionalized poly(p-methylstyrene). R. C. Tsiang, H -M. Huang

127. Preparation of elecrospun polymethyl methacrylate/silver nanofibrous mat for use as a filter media. H -S. Bae, C -N. Kim, M -J. Park, S -M. Lee, I -K. Kang

128.
Surface modification of magnetite nanoparticles for molecular imaging. S -M. Lee, S -J. Kim, M -J. Park, H -S. Bae, K. M. K. Selim, Y -M. Chang, B -H. Lee, I -K. Kang

129. Study on the gradient structure of polysilicone-polyacrylate blend film. L. Wei, C. Zhang, Y. Hu, F. Huang

130. Effects of substrate on the surface properties of silicon containing acrylate blend films. L. Wei, C. Zhang, Y. Hu, F. Yang

131. Nonisothermal crystallization kinetics of tremolite/PA1010 composites. X. Liu, Z. Li III, J. Fang, F. Liu

132. Study on the factors effected on the molecular weight of poly(N,N-dimethylacrylamide). J. Yu, C. Tian, F. Liu, M. Yang

133. Preparation of soybean protein isolate-sodium dodecyl sulfate microcapsules by complex coacervation. W. Liu, X. Zhu, X. Gu, Z. Zhang, X. Z. Kong

134.
Kinetics studies on polymerization of acrylamide using sodium bisulfite as initiator. Q. Chen, J. Fang, G. Jiang, G. Gao, Q. Zhang, F. Liu

MONDAY MORNING

 Section A

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm A

5th Controlled/living Radical Polymerization Symposium

RAFT and Degenerative Transfer Processes

Cosponsored by HEALTHà
K. Matyjaszewski,
Organizer
G. Moad and S. Perrier,
Presiding

8:00 —135. New features of the mechanism of RAFT polymerization. G. Moad, Y. K. Chong, R. Mulder, E. Rizzardo, S. H. Thang

8:25 —136. Recent developments in RAFT polymerization techniques: Design of stimuli-responsive systems relevant to biomedicine. C. L. McCormick III

8:50 —137. RAFT polymerization, a versatile tool for the production of nanostructures. S. Perrier

9:15 —138. RAFT-mediated polymerization of N-vinylpyrrolidone. B. Klumperman, G. Pound, Z. Eksteen, D. Barnard

9:40 —139. Mechanism of Z-RAFT star polymerization. D. Boschmann, M. Drache, M. Fršhlich, G. Zifferer, P. Vana

10:05 — Intermission.

10:15 —140. Reversible chain transfer catalyzed polymerization (RTCP): A new family of living radical polymerization with germanium, tin, phosphorus, and nitrogen compound catalysis. A. Goto, Y. Tsujii, T. Fukuda

10:40 —141. RAFT star polymer formation: Detailed assessment of poly(acrylate) radical reaction pathways via ESI-MS. G. Hart-Smith, H. Chaffey-Millar, C. Barner-Kowollik

11:05 —142. Progress in reverse iodine transfer polymerization (RITP) in miniemulsion and emulsion. J. Tonnar, P. Lacroix-Desmazes

11:30 —143. Living radical polymerizations of vinylidene fluoride in supercritical carbon dioxide. S. Beuermann, M. Imran-ul-haq

11:55 —144. Kinetics and colloidal stability of RAFT miniemulsion polymerization of MMA using comblike polymeric surfactant. P. Ni, X. Zhou, H. Cao, X. Zhu

 Section B

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm B

8th International Biorelated Polymers Symposium

Tutorial

Cosponsored by HEALTHà
C. Scholz,
Organizer
E. Chiellini,
Presiding
R. M. Ottenbrite,
Organizer, Presiding

8:30 —145. Introduction to biorelated polymers for bioapplications. R. M. Ottenbrite

9:00 —146. Biomaterials: Evolving therapies and uses. A. Coury

9:45 — Intermission.

10:05 —147. Advances in biosurface analytical methods applied to biomimetic systems and new macromolecular architectures. R. C. Advincula

10:50 —148. Material science of resorbable polymeric biomaterials and the impact of processing and morphology on performance. M. Jaffe, G. Collins, S -U. Yoo, J. Rafalko

 Section C

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Salon 5/6

Polymeric Delivery for Therapeutics

Controlled Polymer Architectures

Cosponsored by COLL and HEALTHà
R. Lochhead,
Organizer
S. E. Morgan,
Organizer, Presiding

8:30 —149. End functional polymers from living radical polymerization as bioconjugates. D. M. Haddleton, G. Mantovani, J. Lindqvist, M. W. Jones, D. Brayden, S. Ryan, R. Randev, J. Nicolas

9:30 —150. Responsive block copolymer micelles functionalized with biologically-relevant ligands. B. S. Sumerlin, P. De, S. R. Gondi

10:00 —151. RAFT synthesis and aqueous solution studies of biocompatible AB diblock and ABC triblock copolymers based on phosphorylcholine. B. Yu, A. B. Lowe

10:30 — Intermission.

10:40 —152. Synthesis and evaluation of novel sacchride-peptide hybrid copolymers as siRNA delivery agents. F. L. Lin, H. Urakami, Z. Guan

11:10 —153. Synthesis of targeted polymeric carriers utilizing RAFT polymerization for the potential delivery of siRNAs. A. W. York, F. Huang, C. L. McCormick

11:35 —154. Comb-like reducible polyamidoamine for efficient gene transfection. M. Khan, N. Bte Mohd Rafiq, G. Beniah, Y -Y. Yang

 Section D

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Salon 3/4

Microwave-Assisted Chemistry: Organic and Polymer Synthesis

Polymer Synthesis

Cosponsored by ORGN and PMSE
R. Hoogenboom and C. O. Kappe,
Organizers
A. I. Cooper,
Presiding
U. S. Schubert,
Organizer, Presiding

8:25 —155. Microwave initiated living free radical polymerization: Optimization of the preparative scale synthesis of Rasta resins. J. M. Pawluczyk, R. T. McClain, J. J. Mulhearn Jr., D. J. Rudd, C. Denicola, C. W. Lindsley

8:50 —156. Microwave-assisted polymerization of 2-oxazolines: Ionic liquids as solvents and fluorinated aromatic monomers. R. Hoogenboom, C. Guerrero Sanchez, M. Lobert, U. S. Schubert

9:25 —157. Microwave-assisted aget-atrp of vinyl monomers. Z. Cheng, L. Zhang, J. Zhu, X. Zhu

9:50 —158. The influence of microwave heating on initiator decomposition and polymerization initiation steps of free radical polymerization reactions. A. D. Smith, J. P. Robinson, E. Lester, K. J. Thurecht, D. J. Irvine, S. Kingman

10:15 — Intermission.

10:35 —159. Combinatorial microwave synthesis of nanoporous poly(aryleneethynylene)s. A. I. Cooper, N. L. Campbell, J -X. Jiang, E. Stockel, R. Dawson, S. Higgins, H. Niu, R. Clowes

11:10 —160. Cationic ring opening polymerization of 2-ethyl-2-oxazoline with acetyl halide initiators. C. R. Becer, R. M. Paulus, R. Hoogenboom, U. S. Schubert

11:35 —161.
Microwave heating for dispersion copolymerization of 2-ethylhexyl methacrylate and vinylbenzyl chloride and functional group conversions in a fluorinated solvent. R. Karnati, W. T. Ford

 Section E

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm C

Aerogels, Foams and Other Nanoporous Materials

New Methods for Material Design


D. A. Schiraldi and N. Leventis, Organizers
M. A. B. Meador,
Organizer, Presiding

8:30 — Introductory Remarks.

8:35 —162. Tutorial: Architectural design en route to scaleable 3-D multifunctional nanomaterials. D. R. Rolison, J. W. Long

9:15 —163. Template-directed preparation of nano- and micron-sized pores in self-supporting organic-inorganic hybrid membranes. M. M. Collinson, Z -X. Lu

9:45 —164. Highly-transparent polymer modified aerogels. G. Gould, D. Ou, R. Begag, W. E. Rhine

10:15 — Intermission.

10:30 —165. Assemblies of nanoparticles as 3-D scaffolds for new materials design: From polymer crosslinked aerogels to polymer matrix composites. N. Leventis, C. Sotiriou-Leventis, S. Mulik, V. Patil, D. Mohite, Y. Zhang, H. Lu

11:00 —166. Periodic nanoporous materials – from magnetic frameworks to supercapacitors. S. H. Tolbert, T. Brezesinski, T. Quickel, V. H. Le, J. Wang, B. S. Dunn

11:30 —167.
Enzyme encapsulation in silica aerogels. A. C. Pierre

 Section F

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm D

2008 Industrial Polymer Scientist Award in Honor of S. Richard Turner


T. E. Long, Organizer

8:25 — Introductory Remarks.

8:30 —168. Adventures in polymer synthesis. D. N. Schulz, L. Baugh, A. O. Patil, R. T. Stibrany, D. J. Lohse

8:55 —169. Hyperbranched polyesters: From basic understanding to applications. B. Voit

9:20 —170. Precision amphiphilic polymers. K. B. Wagener, E. B. Berda

9:45 — Intermission.

10:00 —171. Discovery and development of new catalysts for the synthesis of small molecules and polymers. G. W. Coates

10:25 —172. The design and synthesis of polymers with thermally stable, second order, nonlinear optical properties. G. C. Willson

10:50 —173. Polyelectrolytes and ion-containing polymers: Getting recharged about their potential! T. E. Long

11:15 — Award Presentation.

11:20 —174. From step-growth polyester polymerization to alternating radical copolymerization: Synthesizing polymers that enable applications. S. R. Turner

MONDAY AFTERNOON

 Section A

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm A

5th Controlled/living Radical Polymerization Symposium

Stable Free Radical Polymerization

Cosponsored by HEALTHà
K. Matyjaszewski,
Organizer
B. Charleux and S. Yamago,
Presiding

1:30 —175. In situ synthesis of amphiphilic block copolymer micelles: Use of a poly(methacrylic acid)-based macroalkoxyamine initiator. C. Dire, B. Charleux, L. Couvreur, S. Magnet

1:55 —176. Development of new alkoxyamines for nitroxide-mediated radical polymerization. R. B. Grubbs, A. C. Greene

2:20 —177. Radical end-functionalization of polymers prepared by sg1 nmp. Y. Guillaneuf, P -E. Dufils, L. Autissier, D. Gigmes, D. Bertin

2:45 —178.
Synthesis of well-defined diblock copolymers with thermally exchangeable dynamic covalent bonds and their transformation to star-like nanogels. H. Otsuka, Y. Amamoto, Y. Matsuda, A. Takahara

3:10 —179. New thiobismuthine cocatalyst in organobismuthine-mediated living radical polymerization. S. Yamago

3:35 — Intermission.

3:45 —180. Formation, dissociation, and radical exchange of organo-cobalt complexes in mediating living radical polymerization of vinyl monomers. B. B. Wayland, S. Li, C -H. Peng, M. Fryd

4:10 —181. Metal-coordination: An effective lever for cobalt-mediated radical polymerization. A. Debuigne, C. JŽr™me, R. Jerome, R. Poli, C. Detrembleur

4:35 —182. Borane-mediated control radical polymerization: Preparation of well-defined fluoropolymers for high energy density capacitors. T. C. M. Chung, Z. Zhang

5:00 —183. Cp2TiCl-catalyzed controlled radical polymerizations of isoprene initiated from epoxides, aldehydes and halides. A. D. Asandei, C. P. Simpson, H. S. Yu

 Section B

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm B

8th International Biorelated Polymers Symposium

Tutorial and Self-assembling Systems

Cosponsored by HEALTHà
R. M. Ottenbrite,
Organizer
K. Kataoka,
Presiding
C. Scholz,
Organizer, Presiding

1:30 — Introductory Remarks.

1:35 —184. Supramolecular nanodevices for gene and drug delivery: Challenge to smart molecular therapy. K. Kataoka

2:20 —185. Antimicrobial polymer films and coatings. K. J. Wynne, P. Kurt, K. Brunson, A. Chakravorty, D. Ohman, L. Wood

3:05 — Intermission.

3:15 —186. New shapes for drug delivery: Persistent circulation of filomicelles opens the dosage window for sustained tumor shrinkage. D. E. Discher

3:35 —187. Design of dual stimuli-responsive nanogels by self-assembly of thiol-terminated poly(n-isopropylacrylamide)-graft pullulan. N. Morimoto, F. M. Winnik, K. Akiyoshi

3:55 —188. Intracellular protein delivery with self-assembled cationic nanogels. K. Akiyoshi, H. Ayame, N. Morimoto

 Section C

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Salon 5/6

Polymeric Delivery for Therapeutics

Hydrogels and Personal Care

Cosponsored by COLL and HEALTHà
S. E. Morgan,
Organizer
R. Lochhead,
Organizer, Presiding

1:30 —189. Oil absorption and delivery system polymer technology for skin and hair care. S. Jordan, A. Batra, M. Meerbote, X. Zhang, L. Kosensky, J. Amos, Y -S. Kim

2:00 —190. Continuous and bicontinuous porous hydrogel systems through emulsion templating. M. S. Silverstein, T. Gitli, O. Kulygin

2:30 —191. Silicone elastomer particles in skin care applications. D. T. Liles, F. Lin

3:00 — Intermission.

3:10 —192. Production of hydrogels containing heparin-mimetic sulfated peptides for controlled delivery of therapeutic growth factors. S. H. Kim, K. L. Kiick

3:35 —193. Novel biodegradable peptide based hydrogel fabricated via click chemistry for cell delivery. S. Q. Liu, R. Ee, Y -Y. Yang

4:00 —194. Increasing the curcumin water solubility by chemically modified starch. H. Yu, Q. Huang

4:25 —195. Thermo-sensitive polymer gels for tunable, therapeutic delivery. J. B. Chiu, K. C. Wang, R. Ramcharitar, F. Wan, C. V. Krishnan, B. S. Hsiao, B. Chu

 Section D

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Salon 3/4

Microwave-Assisted Chemistry: Organic and Polymer Synthesis

Polymers and Nanomaterials

Cosponsored by ORGN and PMSE
U. S. Schubert and C. O. Kappe,
Organizers
S. Perrier,
Presiding
R. Hoogenboom,
Organizer, Presiding

1:00 —196. Microwave assisted RAFT polymerization. S. Perrier

1:35 —197. Microwave-assisted synthesis: An efficient route to prepare new heterocyclic polymers. C. Marestin, E. Chauveau, V. Martin, R. Mercier

2:00 —198. Microwave-assisted synthesis of hydantoin monomers for antibacterial polymeric materials. M. Iannelli, F. Bergamelli, G. Galli

2:25 —199. Nanostructured surfaces from block copoly(2-oxazoline)s prepared by microwave-assisted cationic ring-opening polymerization. N. Lefvre, C -A. Fustin, R. Hoogenboom, U. S. Schubert, J -F. Gohy

2:50 — Intermission.

3:10 —200. Microwave-assisted transformations and synthesis of polymer nanocomposites and nanomaterials. M. N. Nadagouda, V. Polshettiwar, R. S. Varma

3:45 —201. The observation of renucleation in microwave reactions of nanomaterials. A. L. Washington II, G. F. Strouse

4:10 —202. In situ active ion etching of growing indium phosphide nanocrystals: Microwave induced thermal decomposition of ionic liquids. D. D. Lovingood, G. F. Strouse

4:35 —203. Microwave irradiation: A closer look at heating efficiencies. R. Hoogenboom, T. F. A. Wilms, U. S. Schubert

5:00 — Concluding Remarks.

 Section E

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm C

Aerogels, Foams and Other Nanoporous Materials

Organic Porous Structures


M. A. B. Meador, D. A. Schiraldi, and N. Leventis, Organizers
M. F. Bertino,
Presiding

1:30 —204. Cellulosic aerogels for energy applications. A. Rigacci

2:00 —205. Foam-like advanced materials based on clay aerogels. D. A. Schiraldi, M. D. Gawryla, E. M. Arndt

2:30 —206. Effects of temperature and loading rate on the mechanical properties of a polymethylene diisocyanate (PMDI) foam. B. Song

2:50 —207. Nanocomposite reinforced polymer foams made via freeze-drying of low glass transition temperature latexes. C. A. L. Colard, R. A. Cave, N. Grossiord, S. A. F. Bon

3:10 — Intermission.

3:20 —208. Hydrophilic nanoporous 1,2-polybutadiene via surface-initiated atom transfer radical polymerization. F. Guo, K. Jankova, M. E. Vigild, S. Ndoni

3:40 —209. Synthesis and characterization of carbon aerogel nanocomposites containing double-walled carbon nanotubes. M. A. Worsley, J. H. Satcher, T. F. Baumann

4:00 —210. Catalysis study on palladium-hatn-pim. S. Tan, H. J. Mackintosh, P. M. Budd, B. S. Ghanem, N. B. McKeown

 Section F

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm D

Heroes of Chemistry in Materials Advanced Applications

Cosponsored by PMSE and CORP
A. Patil and C. Landry-Coltrain,
Organizers, Presiding

1:00 — Introductory Remarks.

1:05 — Introduction of Rohm and Haas team. T. Wood.

1:10 —211. Aquasetª acrylic thermosetting binders. G. Gappert, B. Weinstein, H. Morris, X. Tang, W. Finch, R. Dobrowolski, P. Nedwick, G. Clamen

1:50 — Introduction of IBM team. T. C. Chen.

1:55 —212. Chemical amplification resists: Enabler of Moore's law. H. Ito, C. G. Willson

2:40 — Intermission.

2:55 —213. Dyneema¨, the world's strongest fiber(TM) and its use in personal and vehicle armor. K. Mencke, R. Steeman

3:35 — Introduction of Bill Maxwell for the Mobil 1 team. P. H. Helferty.

3:40 —214. Environmental benefits of synthetic lubricants: Progress since the 1998 Heroes of Chemistry Award for Mobil 1. W. Maxwell

4:20 —215. New class of lubricant viscosity modifiers. G. verStrate, R. Bloch, M. Struglinski, J. Johnston, R. West

 

Undergraduate Research Poster Session: Polymer Chemistry

Sponsored by CHED, Cosponsored by PMSE, POLY, and SOCED

MONDAY EVENING

 Section A

Pennsylvania Convention Center -- Hall C

Sci-Mix


C. Landry-Coltrain, Organizer

8:00 - 10:00

75, 77, 79-81, 85, 90-91, 94, 111. See previous listings.

308-309, 312, 314-315, 338, 340, 345, 369, 374, 389, 392, 414, 421, 425, 427-436, 438-439, 445-448, 451, 453, 456, 458-459, 462-464, 466, 470, 473-474, 478-479, 481-482, 484-490, 492. See subsequent listings.

TUESDAY MORNING

 Section A

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm A

5th Controlled/living Radical Polymerization Symposium

Controlled Architecture and Functionality by CRP

Cosponsored by HEALTHà
K. Matyjaszewski,
Organizer
S. P. Armes and Y. Yagci,
Presiding

8:00 —216. Use of atom transfer radical coupling reactions for the synthesis of various macromolecular structures. Y. Yagci, Y. Yuksel Durmaz, B. Aydogan, I. Cianga

8:25 —217. Synthesis of well-defined diblock copolymer of aromatic polyether and poly(methyl methacrylate) by chain-growth condensation polymerization and atom transfer radical polymerization. T. Yokozawa, T. Ando, N. Ajioka, A. Yokoyama

8:50 —218. Block copolymers from ATRP and RAFT polymerization. D. A. Shipp, C. D. Petruczok, V. Malepu, T. Tran

9:15 —219. Controlled radical polymerization employed for the preparation of nanostructured and multifunctional polymers for thin film application. B. I. Voit, S. Fleischmann, H. Komber, M. Messerschmidt, Z. Oezyuerek, J. Stadermann

9:40 —220.
Well-defined polymers bearing alkene/norbornene functionalities and their transformations into complex structures by multiple living polymerizations. J. Ma, C. Cheng, G. Sun, Z. Li, K. L. Wooley

10:05 — Intermission.

10:15 —221. Synthesis of primary amine-based branched copolymers by living radical polymerization. Y. Li, S. P. Armes

10:40 —222. Precisely controlling the architecture of nanoscale polymeric materials by copolymerization of cross-linkers. H. Gao, K. Matyjaszewski

11:05 —223. Stimuli-responsive degradable amphiphilic conetworks: Key-role of ATRP. P. Dubois, L. Mespouille, O. Coulembier, P. DegŽe

11:30 —224. Functionalization of star-shaped polymer structures for design of reactive nanoparticles. F. E. Du Prez, M. Lammens, D. Fournier

11:55 —225. Tadpole-shaped copolymers via ATRP, click chemistry and ring opening polymerization. Z -C. Li, F -S. Du, Y -Q. Dong

 Section B

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm B

8th International Biorelated Polymers Symposium

Synthesis

Cosponsored by HEALTHà
R. M. Ottenbrite and C. Scholz,
Organizers
K. Anwer and U. Edlund,
Presiding

8:30 — Introductory Remarks.

8:35 —226. Synthesis of peptide ribonucleic acid (PRNA)-DNA chimera and interaction with DNA and RNA. T. Wada, N. Sawa, Y. Maeda, H. Sato, H. Chon, S. Kanaya, Y. Inoue

8:55 —227. Functionalized polymers for gene therapy: Discovery, optimization and clinical development. J. Sparks, J. G. Fewell, M. Matar, G. Slobodkin, J. Rice, E. Brunhoeber, C. Pence, D. H. Lewis, K. Anwer

9:15 —228. Functional polymeric nanocarriers as nonviral gene delivery vectors. S. Venkataraman, C. Y. Ke, Y. Y. Yang

9:35 —229. Hybrid elastin mimetic polymers with alternating molecular architecture. S. E. Grieshaber, K. L. Kiick, X. Jia

9:55 — Intermission.

10:05 —230. Synthesis of poly(amino acids) and poly(amino acid) block copolymers with controlled molecular weight. C. Scholz, W. Vayaboury

10:25 —231. Functionalization of surfaces in porous resorbable scaffolds. U. Edlund, M. Kallrot, A -C. Albertsson

10:45 —232. Poly(vinyl alcohol) based materials for postoperative adhesion prevention in surgery. J. Kressler, Y. Jiang, C. Weis, E. K. Odermatt

11:05 —233. Rational design and exploration of polymer space through combinatorial and high-throughput approaches with the application in mind. R. Rojas, J. Kohn

11:25 —234. Structural analysis and mechanical characterization of hyaluronic acid-based doubly crosslinked networks. A. K. Jha, R. A. Hule, D. J. Pochan, X. Jia

 Section C

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Salon 5/6

Polymeric Delivery for Therapeutics

Polymeric Micelles and Vesicles

Cosponsored by COLL and HEALTHà
R. Lochhead,
Organizer
S. E. Morgan,
Organizer, Presiding

8:30 —235. Star-shaped unimolecular micelles: Tuning the host abilities from hydrophobic to hydrophilic guest molecules. O. G. Schramm, R. Hoogenboom, U. S. Schubert

9:00 —236. Synthesis of linear and branched poly(trimethylene carbonate-co-lactide) copolymers and an investigation of chemical structure on hydrolytic degradation. V. Truong, A. K. Whittaker, I. Blakey

9:30 —237. Aminoglycoside-ionopolymeric nanoplexes for treating intracellular bacterial pathogens. N. Pothayee, M. Vadala, A. Ranjan, N. Jain, M. Seleem, N. Sriranganathan, J. S. Riffle

9:55 — Intermission.

10:10 —238. A novel linear dendritic amphiphilic block copolymer as a viable drug delivery carrier. Z. Poon, S. Chen, P. T. Hammond

10:35 —239. Acrylation of PCL-PEO copolymers to slow the passive release of doxorubicin from self-assembled polymersomes. J. S. Katz, D. H. Levine, D. A. Hammer, J. A. Burdick

11:00 —240.
Polymersomes as carriers for genetic and protein therapeutics. D. A. Christian, S. Cai, D. M. Bowen, Y. H. Kim, J. D. Pajerowski, D. E. Discher

11:25 —241. Ca alginate composite microcapsules for cell encapsulation. M. A. Jafar Mazumder, N. Burke, F. Shen, M. Potter, H. D. H. Stover

 Section D

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm C

Paul J. Flory Polymer Educational Award in Honor of Frank Kelley

Technology Transfer of Polymer Research: Benefits and Challenges


R. J. Farris and W. J. MacKnight, Organizers
F. N. Harris,
Presiding

9:00 — Introductory Remarks. R. J. Farris, F. N. Harris .

9:15 —242. Polymer technology development at Virginia Tech over the last 30 years. J. E. McGrath

9:45 —243. The art of managing academic science or macromolecular engineering novel biomaterials. J. P. Kennedy

10:15 — Intermission.

10:30 —244. Commercialization of innovation. L. C. Yanyo

11:00 —245. Development of industrial relations at the Polymer Science and Engineering Department at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. W. J. MacKnight, J. D. Capistran

11:30 —246. Layered polymeric systems: The quest for "high value addedÓ products. E. Baer

 Section E

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Freedom Blrm H

Aerogels, Foams and Other Nanoporous Materials

Characterization and Control of Structure


M. A. B. Meador and N. Leventis, Organizers
D. A. Schiraldi,
Organizer, Presiding

9:00 —247. Mechanical properties of L3-templated nanostructured silica. I. A. Aksay, H. Sai, D. M. Dabbs

9:30 —248. Simulation of the evolution of the nanostructure of crosslinked silica-aerogels under compression. H. Lu, B. Fu, N. Daphalapurkar, J. Hanan, C. Sotiriou-Leventis, N. Leventis

10:00 —249. Nanoporous polymers and nanocomposites synthesized within high internal phase emulsions. M. S. Silverstein, J. Normatov

10:30 —250. Visualizing clay aerogel composite formation. M. D. Gawryla, D. A. Schiraldi

10:50 — Intermission.

11:00 —251. Fabrication of low-shrinkage microporous 3-D polymer structures through interference lithography. Y. Xu, A. Hayek, X. Zhu, T. Okada, J. H. Moon, S. Barlow, S. R. Marder, S. Yang

11:20 —252. Control of cellular structure via nanofiller size and surface chemistry. B. K. Goren, L. Chen, L. S. Schadler, R. Ozisik

11:40 —253.
Characterizing the pore size distribution in nanoporous materials. A. J. Hill, S. J. Pas, M. R. Hill, B. D. Freeman

 Section F

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm D

Conducting Polymers, Molecular Wires, and Devices: A Tribute to Alan MacDiarmid


S. A. Jenekhe and W. E. Jones Jr., Organizers, Presiding

8:30 — Introductory Remarks.

8:40 —254. Conductor-dielectric transition in polyaniline nanofiber networks: Role of fiber-fiber interfaces. A. J. Epstein, N -R. Chiou, O. Adetunji

9:10 —255. Substrate directed modification and enhancement of conducting polymer thin films and nanomaterials. W. E. Jones Jr., J. J. Martin, P. N. Kariuki, J. Chiguma

9:30 —256. Conductive hybrid nanocomposites based on polymer/PANI/CNT nanocomposites. M. Narkis, E. Zelikman, A. Siegmann, P. Pštschke, L. Valentini, J. M. Kenny

9:50 —257.
White light luminescent FRET dye doped bionanofibers and micropatterned electrochromic nanofibers. G. A. Sotzing

10:20 — Intermission.

10:35 —258. Conducting polymer electrochemistry: From polyacetylene batteries to supercapacitors and electrochromic displays. J. R. Reynolds

11:05 —259. Polymer semiconductor nanowires: Synthesis, morphology, charge transport, and device applications. S. A. Jenekhe

11:25 —260. In situ polymerization of a thin skin of self-doped polyaniline to improve electronic performance of carbon nanotube networks. W. Cheung, Y. Ma, D. Wei, A. Bogozi, P. L. Chiu, L. Wang, F. Pontoriero, R. Mendelsohn, H. He

11:45 —261.
Synthesis and applications of conducting polymer nanofibers. R. B. Kaner, C. O. Baker, R. W. Kojima, H. D. Tran, J. M. D'Arcy, V. Barahona, S. Virji, B. H. Weiller

12:15 — Concluding Remarks.

TUESDAY AFTERNOON

 Section A

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm A

5th Controlled/living Radical Polymerization Symposium

Macroscopic Properties of Polymers Made by CRP

Cosponsored by HEALTHà
K. Matyjaszewski,
Organizer
G. Hadziioannou and B. Voit,
Presiding

1:30 —262. Stabilization of the perforated lamellar microstructure in block copolymers with asymmetric block polydispersity. M. Bockstaller, J. Listak, W. Jakubowski, L. Mueller, A. T. Plichta, K. Matyjaszewski

1:55 —263. The effect of molecular structure on thermo-mechanical properties of acrylate based segmented, gradient and random copolymers prepared by ATRP. K. Koynov, A. Juhari, A. Best, T. Pakula, K. Matyjaszewski

2:20 —264. Gradient copolymers synthesized by controlled radical polymerization: Novel materials with unusual properties and applications. J. M. Torkelson, M. M. Mok, R. W. Sandoval, J. Kim, C. L. H. Wong, C. M. Dettmer, S. T. Nguyen

2:45 —265. Nanocarbons with tunable electronic structure from well-defined copolymers containing polyacrylonitrile prepared by controlled radical polymerization. T. Kowalewski, J. P. McGann, D. Yaron, L. A. McCullough, K. Matyjaszewski

3:10 —266. Versatile synthetic routes for conjugated rod-coil block copolymers and their use in solar cell devices. G. Hadziioannou

3:35 — Intermission.

3:45 —267. Imaging of designer macromolecules: Molecular characterization and material properties. S. S. Sheiko

4:10 —268. Structure and dynamics of silica nanoparticle tethered polymer brushes. V. Goel, J. Pietrasik, K. Matyjaszewski, R. Krishnamoorti

4:35 —269. Design and synthesis of electroactive dendron end-functionalized macromolecules via living-free radical polymerizations: Electrograting on conducting surfaces. R. C. Advincula

5:00 —270. Baroplastic in different topologies and used as compatibilizer. M. H. Acar, S. Inceoglu

 Section B

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm B

8th International Biorelated Polymers Symposium

Tissue Engineering and Polymer Degradation

Cosponsored by HEALTHà
R. M. Ottenbrite and C. Scholz,
Organizers
M. Haratake and P. Markland,
Presiding

1:30 — Introductory Remarks.

1:35 —271. Surface grafting of polyglycerols to red blood cell membranes: Toward immunocamouflaged erythrocytes. N. A. A. Rossi, R. K. Kainthan, M. D. Scott, D. E. Brooks, J. N. Kizhakkedathu

1:55 —272. Water soluble bivalent ligands to engage receptors and control cellular responses in mast cells. B. Sannigrahi, B. Jones, I. M. Khan, B. Baird, D. Sil

2:15 —273.
Effect of microstructure on hydrolytic degradation of poly(L-lactic acid). N. Vasanthan, O. Ly, H. Ly

2:35 —274. Polymers from functional macrocyclic lactones: Enzymatic ring opening polymerization, biodegradation and biocompatibility. I. van der Meulen, M. de Geus, H. Antheunis, R. Deumens, B. A. Joosten, A. Heise, C. E. Koning

2:55 —
Intermission.

3:05 —275. Novel nanostructured hybrid polyurethanes featuring unique bulk degradation and controllable drug delivery. Q. Guo, P. T. Knight, P. T. Mather

3:25 —276. Development of tunable, fibrous elastomeric scaffolds and their cellular interactions. J. L. Ifkovits, J. J. Devlin, J. A. Burdick

3:45 —277. Emulsion-templated porous polymers enabling 3-D cell growth. R. J. Carnachan, M. Bokhari, A. MŠŠttŠ, N. R. Cameron, S. Przyborski

4:05 —278. Synthesis of linear and star poly(lactide-co-glycolide fumarate) macromers as biodegradable crosslinkable scaffolds for tissue engineering. W. Xu, X. He, E. Jabbari

4:25 —279. Effects of physical form on in vitro degradation of an absorbable biomaterial made from poly(glycolide-co-lactide). M. Deng, G. Chen, F. Cichocki, D. Burkley, J. Zhou, R. Vetrecin

 Section C

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm D

Conducting Polymers, Molecular Wires, and Devices: A Tribute to Alan MacDiarmid


W. E. Jones Jr. and S. A. Jenekhe, Organizers
J. J. Martin,
Presiding

1:30 —280. Highly conductive PEDOT nanofibers obtained by combination of electrospinning and vapor-phase polymerization. A. Laforgue, L. Robitaille

1:50 —281. Electronic structure and properties dithienothiophene and dithienopyrrole containing materials. S. R. Marder, X. Zhan, X. Zhang, S. Odom, S. Barlow, S. Ohira, J -L. Bredas, B. Kippelen, B. Domercq, W. Postcavage, P -T. Wu, J. M. Hancock, S. A. Jenekhe, T. Steckler, J. R. Reynolds

2:20 —282. Controlling reactivity and delocalization in organic electronic materials through molecular design. J. D. Tovar, A. Caruso Jr., D. A. Guthrie, P. A. Peart

2:40 —283. Soliton theory revisited. X. Lin

3:00 — Intermission.

3:20 —284. The path to predicting charge-carrier mobilities in organic semiconductors: Description of the charge transport parameters. J -L. Bredas

3:50 —285. Synthesis and characterization of regioregular, polyphilic 3-(semifluoroalkyl thiophene) homopolymers and alternating copolymers. S. Watt, B. Wang, M. Hong, D. M. Collard

4:10 —286. Unanticipated photoconductivity and current rectification in thin DNA films: Experiment and theory. D. Y. Zang, C. Oh, R. Venkatramani, D. N. Beratan

4:30 —287.
Thiazolothiazole-thiophene copolymers for printable organic field-effect transistors. I. Osaka, R. Zhang, G. SauvŽ, T. Kowalewski, R. D. McCullough

4:50 — Concluding Remarks.

 Section D

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Liberty Blrm C

Paul J. Flory Polymer Educational Award in Honor of Frank Kelley

Technology Transfer of Polymer Research: Benefits and Challenges


W. J. MacKnight, Organizer
R. J. Farris,
Organizer, Presiding

1:30 —288. Technology transfer at Lawrence Livermore: Sol-gel materials and processes for polymeric and inorganic aerogels, nanoporous materials and tailored materials. J. D. LeMay

2:00 —289. Future directions of the polymer program at the University of Akron. S. Z. D. Cheng

2:30 —290. Technology transfer triumphs, trends, and troubles. T. B. Thompson

3:00 — Intermission.

3:15 —291. Challenges for the future of technology transfer and industrial/academic collaborative research. D. L. M. Proenza

3:45 —292. Polymer education, research and technology transfer. F. N. Kelley

4:15 — Open Discussion. Tech transfer. R. Farris .

4:45 — Concluding Remarks. S. Cheng .

 Section E

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Freedom Blrm G

Aerogels, Foams and Other Nanoporous Materials

Hybrid Materials


M. A. B. Meador and D. A. Schiraldi, Organizers
N. Leventis,
Organizer, Presiding

1:30 —293. Superhydrophobic surfaces and coatings. A. V. Rao

2:00 —294. Hybrid organic-inorganic aerogels. D. A. Loy, K. A. DeFriend, D. J. Boday

2:30 —295. Assembly and properties of hierarchically structured nanocomposites. E. P. Giannelis

3:00 —296. Adapting polymer cross-linking of silica based aerogels to a safer, industry friendly process. M. A. B. Meador, A. S. Weber, A. Hindi, K. Deshpande, S. White, G. Gould

3:30 — Intermission.

3:40 —297. Compressive behavior of crosslinked mesoporous silica aerogels at high strain rates. H. Lu, H. Luo, S. Mulik, C. Sotiriou-Leventis, N. Leventis

4:10 —298.
Nanofiber reinforced aerogel synthesis, manufacturing and characterization. L. Li, B. Yalcin, M. A. B. Meador, M. Cakmak

4:30 —299. Mineralization of polymer/clay aerogels: A bioinspired approach to improving mechanical properties of low density materials. J. R. Johnson III, D. A. Schiraldi, J. Spikowski

 Section F

Sheraton Philadelphia City Center -- Salon 5/6

Polymers in Flat Panel Display Technologies

Cosponsored by PMSE
J. Greener and J. Brooks,
Organizers, Presiding

1:00 — Introductory Remarks.

1:05 —300. Materials and interface engineering for high efficiency polymer light-emitting diodes. F. Huang, M. S. Liu, Y -J. Cheng, Y. Zhang, A. K -Y. Jen

1:35 —301.
Nanostructured polymer layers and brushes on indium tin oxide (ITO) surfaces for efficient OLED display devices. R. Advincula

2:05 —302. Conjugated polymers containing pendant phenylenediamine moiety. S. Zheng, K. Vaeth

2:35 — Intermission.

2:45 —303. Synthesis and characterization of pyridyl carbozole based polymeric materials for electrophosphorescent lighting-emitting devices. J. Li

3:15 —304. Flexible liquid crystal displays using combined polymers and liquid crystals. L -C. Chien

3:45 —305. Optical compensation films for liquid crystalline displays. S. Z. D. Cheng, F. W. Harris

4:15 —306. Hole mobilities of thermally polymerized triaryldiamine derivatives and their applications as hole transport materials in OLEDs. C -Y. Lin, Y -M. Chen, H -F. Chen, F -C. Fang, Y -C. Lin, W -Y. Hung, K -T. Wong, J. Brooks, R. C. Kwong, S. C. Xia

TUESDAY EVENING

 Section A

Pennsylvania Convention Center -- Hall C

5th Controlled/living Radical Polymerization Symposium

Cosponsored by HEALTHà
K. Matyjaszewski,
Organizer
B. Klumperman, T. Terashima, and M. J. Nasrullah,
Presiding

6:00 - 8:00

307. Exploration of copper beads as catalyst for atom transfer radical polymerization of styrene. M. J. Nasrullah, D. C. Webster, V. V. Sonalkar, T. Koralage

308.
ATRP and ARGET of styrene and t-butyl acrylate using high throughput approach. M. J. Nasrullah, D. C. Webster, V. V. Sonalkar, R. M. Hoshaw

309.
Branched polyisobutylene by Li+ catalyzed radical polymerization of isobutylene. V. Volkis, R. K. Shoemaker, J. Michl

310. Direct synthesis of anisotropic polymer nanoparticles by ATRP. D. J. Adams, T. He, A. I. Cooper, S. P. Rannard

311. RAFT method for synthesis of model random polyampholytes. W. T. Ford, L. N. D'Souza, B. Kaur

312. Rate enhanced ATRP of methyl methacrylate via high free radical initiator loadings. M. Machado, S. Faucher, S. Zhu

313. Synthesis of branched rod-coil copolymers by the combination of ATRP and coordination polymerization. S. Uchida, N. Hatoyama, K. Ishizu

314. Synthesis of novel proton conductive triblock copolymers via living radical polymerization. K. Xu, K. Li, P. Khanchaitit, Q. Wang

315. Amino functionalized block copolymers via NMP and RAFT. J. Stadermann, S. Fleischmann, H. Komber, B. I. Voit

316. Designer polymers via metal-catalyzed living radical polymerization: End-group transformation, sequence-regulated polymers, and core-functionalized star polymers. T. Terashima, M. Ouchi, M. Sawamoto

317. Design of novel iron catalysts for living radical polymerization of functional methacrylates. M. Ishio, T. Terashima, M. Ouchi, M. Sawamoto

318. End-functionalized polymers by quantitative alkoxy-capping in metal catalyzed living radical polymerization: Umpolung of terminal carbon-halogen bond by a modifier monomer. K. Nakatani, T. Terashima, M. Ouchi, M. Sawamoto

319. Photoinduced living radical polymerization with highly active manganese complex. K. Koumura, K. Satoh, M. Kamigaito

320. Template-assisted living radical polymerization: Synthesis of polymer-built-in initiators via living cationic polymerization and their template effect in sequence regulaion. S. Ida, T. Terashima, M. Ouchi, M. Sawamoto

321. Madix polymerization of vinyl phosphonates. M. Destarac, E. Van Gramberen, P. Dupuis, X. Vila

322. Madix synthesis of P(Dadmac)-based double hydrophilic block copolymers. M. Destarac, E. Van Gramberen, C. Boutin, A. Guinaudeau, S. Chadel

323. Kinetic behavior of a-amido trifluoromethyl xanthate Madix agents: Structure-reactivity relationship. M. Destarac, J. Ruchmann, X. Vila, S. Z. Zard, E. Van Gramberen, D. Taton

324.
MADIX thermoresponsive amphiphilic block copolymers: Synthesis, characterization and application to stimulable emulsions. A. Papon, K. Karagianni, E. Van Gramberen, M. Destarac

325. MADIX polytheque: A virtual library of architectured polymers for high throughput applications. P. Atallah, J. Wilson, I. Gonzalez, J. Chavanne, G. Bacquet, M. Destarac

326. RAFT polymerization mediated by an organometallic thiocarbonyl thio transfer agent. R. Geagea, R. Stefak, S. Mazires, M. Destarac

327. Synthesis of highly labile SG1-based alkoxyamines under photochemical conditions. Y. Guillaneuf, J -L. Couturier, D. Gigmes, P. Tordo, D. Bertin

328. Effective nitroxide-mediated polymerization of methyl methacrylate. Y. Guillaneuf, D. Gigmes, S. Marque, D. Bertin, P. Tordo

329.
Determination of living chain fraction of poly(styrene) from nitroxyde mediated polymerization by liquid chromatography under critical conditions. C. Petit, B. Luneau, E. Beaudoin, D. Gigmes, D. Bertin

330. Use of sg1-based alkoxyamine bearing a n-succinimidyl ester to achieve advanced copolymer architectures. J. Vinas, N. Chagneux, D. Gigmes, T. Trimaille, A. Favier, Y. Guillaneuf, D. Bertin, C. Lefay

331. Mechanism of reverse iodine transfer polymerization (RITP) of methyl acrylate: Kinetics and simulations. J. Tonnar, R. Severac, P. Lacroix-Desmazes, B. Boutevin

332. Synthesis of poly(vinylbenzyl chloride) and poly(tert-butyl acrylate) by RITP: Precursors to amphiphilic bl