1
A quantitative analysis of peroxy- mediated cyclic regeneration of
eosin under oxygen-rich photopolymerization conditions
Jisam Wong
a,b
, Kaja Kaastrup
a
, Alan Aguirre-Soto
c
, Hadley D. Sikes
a,b
*
a
Department of Chemical Engineering,
b
Program in Polymers and Soft Matter, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA
c
Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, University of
Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309
ABSTRACT
Eosin, a photoreducible xanthene, reacts with tertiary amines and initiates the free radical photopolymerization of
aqueous solutions of acrylate monomers. This reaction proceeds even in the presence of a large excess (~1000X)
of inhibiting oxygen via a mechanism that has not been established conclusively. This chemistry has proven
useful in the area of biosensing, where the formation of a hydrogel on the time scale of seconds serves as a
macroscopic, amplified signal that can be connected to molecular recognition events. In this work, we built a
kinetic model to quantitatively explore a mechanism in which eosin is regenerated through the reaction of eosin-
based radicals with peroxy- radicals formed from oxygen-inhibition reactions. To determine whether the
predictions of this model are consistent with conversion profiles measured using real-time FTIR, we refrained from
fitting rate constants or other unknown parameters associated with individual steps in the mechanism to the
conversion profile. Rather, we considered physical upper bounds and performed sensitivity analyses spanning
several orders of magnitude to predict the reactivity of the system. We explored the effects of the peroxy-
mediated regeneration rate constant, k
regen
, and the initial eosin concentration on the irradiation time that is
required to reach a C=C bond conversion of 0.2 (t
0.2
). At this C=C bond conversion, the aqueous monomer
solutions studied herein have become hydrogels. The predictions of the model capture several trends that we
have observed experimentally. However, even when the rate constants associated with eosin regeneration via
reaction with peroxy- species are set at the physical upper bounds, the values of t
0.2
predicted by the model are
much larger than those that we observed experimentally. The results presented herein motivate and provide a
© 2015. This manuscript version is made available under the Elsevier user license
http://www.elsevier.com/open-access/userlicense/1.0/