Abstract
Ring expansion metathesis polymerization (REMP) is a robust and versatile method used to access polymeric cyclic architectures for applications in biomedicine, electronics, and performance engineering. Cyclic Ru-benzylidene REMP catalyst CB6 demonstrates higher stability and polymerization rates compared to other Ru-based systems. However, CB6 also exhibits an unusual molar mass evolution profile where high molar mass cyclic polymers are produced at early time points followed by a gradual decrease in molar mass. For broad cyclic polymer applications to be fully realized, a mechanistic understanding of REMP is crucial. In this work, we investigate the polymerization profiles of CB6 using a series of mechanistic studies to probe the requisite chain transfer steps envisaged for such a polymerization profile. Furthermore, our studies reveal an intricate relationship between reaction concentration and equilibrium molar mass. These collective studies demonstrate CB6’s role not only as an initiator, but also as a catalytic chain transfer agent. Overall, we showcase a new toolkit by which to control REMP that will allow further optimization of catalyst design and the creation of novel cyclic materials.
Supplementary materials
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Supporting Information
Description
Experimental and synthetic procedures, NMR spectra, GPC traces, DSC traces.
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