Functional Roles of Groups in Sodium Methallyl Sulfonate (SMAS)
1. Carbon-carbon double bond (C=C)
The reactive vinyl double bond enables SMAS to take part in free-radical copolymerization with acrylic, acrylamide, nitrile monomers, covalently graft sulfonate side groups onto polymer backbone; it also serves as mild chain transfer site to regulate polymer molecular weight and narrow molecular distribution during polymerization.
2. Sulfonate group (–SO₃⁻)
- Imparts strong anionic hydrophilicity and excellent water solubility to resultant copolymers;
- Produces electrostatic repulsion for dispersion, anti-scaling and chelation against Ca²⁺/Mg²⁺ metal ions;
- Improves polymer dyeability, antistatic property, thermal & chemical resistance via ionic interaction and hydrogen bonding.
Advantages of SMAS vs common acrylic monomers
- Strong permanent anionic sulfonate brings far better hydrophilicity than carboxyl-containing acrylic units; acrylic’s –COOH easily loses charge under acidic condition while –SO₃⁻ keeps ionic stability across wide pH range.
- SMAS shows weaker homopolymerization tendency, more stable copolymerization with diverse vinyl monomers, less self-aggregation during synthesis.
- Sulfonate group chelates heavy/alkaline earth ions, stabilizing polymerization against impurity disturbance; acrylic monomers lack metal shielding capability.
- Copolymer modified by SMAS owns superior dispersion, anti-scale, antistatic and high-temperature resistance over acrylic-only polymer.
- SMAS is fully water-soluble without organic solvent assistance, more eco-friendly than oil-soluble acrylic monomers.






