Literature DB >> 19226179

Probing the mechanism of the PCl5-initiated living cationic polymerization of the phosphoranimine Cl3P=NSiMe3 using model compound chemistry.

Vivienne Blackstone1, Alan J Lough, Martin Murray, Ian Manners.   

Abstract

New insight into the mechanism of the ambient temperature PCl5-initiated living cationic chain growth polycondensation of the N-silylphosphoranimine Cl3P=NSiMe3 (1) to give poly(dichlorophosphazene), [N=PCl2]n, has been provided by studies of model compound chemistry. Investigations of the reactivity of Cl- salts of the proposed cationic intermediates [Cl3P=N=PCl3]+ ([2]+) and [Cl3P=N-PCl2=N=PCl3]+ ([6]+) toward Ph3P=NSiMe3 (3a) provided evidence that under the usual polymerization conditions that involve a high monomer to initiator ratio, propagation occurs at both chain ends. However, analogous studies of near stoichiometric processes suggested that propagation is faster at one chain end, particularly when the chains are short. In addition, experiments involving [Ph3P=N=PPh3][PCl6] ([9][PCl6]) and the N-silylphosphoranimines R3P=NSiMe3 3a (R = Ph) and 3b (R = p-CF3C6H4), showed that the [PCl6]- anion, which is formed in the early stages of the polymerization and has hitherto been assumed to be an innocent spectator counteranion, is actually reactive under the reaction conditions and can initiate oligomerization and polymerization. Finally, the absence of reactions between phosphoranimines 3b or 1 with the Cl- salts of the cations [Ph3P=N-PCl2=N=PPh3]+ ([10a]+), [Ph3P=N-(PCl2=N)2=PPh3]+ ([5]+), and [Ph3P=N-(PCl2=N)3=PPh3]+ ([8]+) with P-Cl bonds located internally but not at the chain ends have shown that chain branching reactions are unlikely to be significant during the polymerization. These results identify key factors that complicate the living PCl5-initiated chain growth polycondensation of 1 and potentially lead to a loss of control over molecular weight and broaden the molecular weight distributions, but also indicate that the polymer formed is essentially linear rather than branched.

Entities:  

Year:  2009        PMID: 19226179     DOI: 10.1021/ja808517d

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Chem Soc        ISSN: 0002-7863            Impact factor:   15.419


  7 in total

1.  Thermoresponsive Polyphosphazene-Based Molecular Brushes by Living Cationic Polymerization.

Authors:  Sandra Wilfert; Aitziber Iturmendi; Helena Henke; Oliver Brüggemann; Ian Teasdale
Journal:  Macromol Symp       Date:  2014-03-01

2.  Polyphosphazenes: Multifunctional, Biodegradable Vehicles for Drug and Gene Delivery.

Authors:  Ian Teasdale; Oliver Brüggemann
Journal:  Polymers (Basel)       Date:  2013-03-01       Impact factor: 4.329

3.  Biodegradable Polyphosphazene Based Peptide-Polymer Hybrids.

Authors:  Anne Linhardt; Michael König; Wolfgang Schöfberger; Oliver Brüggemann; Alexander K Andrianov; Ian Teasdale
Journal:  Polymers (Basel)       Date:  2016-04-22       Impact factor: 4.329

4.  Hetero and homo α,ω-chain-end functionalized polyphosphazenes.

Authors:  Paul Strasser; Oliver Plavcan; Edip Ajvazi; Helena Henke; Oliver Brüggemann; Ian Teasdale
Journal:  J Polym Sci (2020)       Date:  2022-04-08

5.  Water-Soluble, Biocompatible Polyphosphazenes with Controllable and pH-Promoted Degradation Behavior.

Authors:  Sandra Wilfert; Aitziber Iturmendi; Wolfgang Schoefberger; Kushtrim Kryeziu; Petra Heffeter; Walter Berger; Oliver Brüggemann; Ian Teasdale
Journal:  J Polym Sci A Polym Chem       Date:  2014-01-15       Impact factor: 2.702

6.  Chain-end-functionalized polyphosphazenes via a one-pot phosphine-mediated living polymerization.

Authors:  Sandra Wilfert; Helena Henke; Wolfgang Schoefberger; Oliver Brüggemann; Ian Teasdale
Journal:  Macromol Rapid Commun       Date:  2014-04-04       Impact factor: 5.734

7.  Preparation of polyphosphazenes: a tutorial review.

Authors:  Sandra Rothemund; Ian Teasdale
Journal:  Chem Soc Rev       Date:  2016-06-17       Impact factor: 54.564

  7 in total

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