I am attempting to make a biopolymer by functionalizing PVC with a sulfhydryl group, then forming a disulfide bond to a protein. I am using PVC because I already had finely powdered PVC lying around. This is from a commercial source, so purity is unknown. Yesterday I did this reaction: I reacted 5 grams of PVC in 50mL of MTBE (which I knew would not dissolve the PVC, but I was trying to do a solid phase reaction) and about 2 grams of NaSH. This was done in a fume hood. Heated to 65C with stirring. Nothing was happening, so I added about 25 mL of dry methanol. The mixture quickly (over about 5 mins) turned green. I did not notice gas evolving, but I was stirring. I assumed the green color was due to the dissolution of the yellow NaSH, but now I think it could have been Cl2. Over about the next 15 minutes, the mixture became white again. I continued to heat under a reflux column for about 6 hours total. The product was vacuum filtered and washed with methanol under vacuum. I hoped to find an SH peak in IR but did not observe that. Instead, I observed a HUGE OH peak. I sat the white powder to dry overnight and ran IR this morning. I observed the same huge OH peak and also noticed an additional peak around 1700 where one would expect to find a carbonyl. I have attached the IR. Pure PVC is in red, and my product is in blue. I found this puzzling, so I would appreciate any input.