Abstract
Bio-derived monomers, readily available from biomass via atom- and redox-efficient processes, will need to play a major role in the development of sustainable polymeric materials. Here, we show that a family of tricyclic monomers, efficiently made from bio-based furans via Diels-Alder chemistry, allows the production of polyenes with diverse thermo/physical properties through Ring Opening Metathesis Polymerization (ROMP). Via small structure variations, we offer insight into the intricacies of monomer design and implications for polymerization. Notably, the thermostable polyenes all show very similarly high Head-to-Tail regioregularities, trans-linkage isomerism distributions and narrow dispersities. In addition, the monomers exhibit rare reactivity with ethyl vinyl ether, which can be used chain transfer agent, making telechelic polyenes accessible. The monomers do differ substantially in polymerization rate, spanning two orders of magnitude, in extent of molecular weight control and in the properties of the resulting amorphous polymers. With glass transition temperatures ranging from 116 to 217 °C and degradation temperatures succeeding 350 °C, these materials are among the highest performing biobased homopolymers reported. We elucidate these variations, demonstrating that ROMP is profoundly influenced by subtle structural changes in the monomers.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information
Description
It contains all the relevant experimental descriptions, characterizations, data for the kinetic and mechanistic studies and computational details.
Actions