| Literature DB >> 31336650 |
Adrian Domiński1, Tomasz Konieczny1, Magdalena Zięba1, Magdalena Klim1, Piotr Kurcok2,3.
Abstract
It was shown that selected sodium phenoxide derivatives with different basicity and nucleophilicity, such as sodium p-nitrophenoxide, p-chlorophenoxide, 1-napthoxide, phenoxide and p-methoxyphenoxide, are effective initiators in anionic ring-opening polymerization (AROP) of β-butyrolactone in mild conditions. It was found that phenoxides as initiators in anionic ring-opening polymerization of β-butyrolactone behave as strong nucleophiles, or weak nucleophiles, as well as Brønsted bases. The resulting polyesters possessing hydroxy, phenoxy and crotonate initial groups are formed respectively by the attack of phenoxide anion at (i) C2 followed by an elimination reaction with hydroxide formation, (ii) C4 and (iii) abstraction of acidic proton at C3. The obtained poly(3-hydroxybutyrate) possesses carboxylate growing species. The ratio of the observed initial groups strongly depends on the basicity and nucleophilicity of the sodium phenoxide derivative used as initiator. The proposed mechanism of this polymerization describes the reactions leading to formation of observed end groups. Moreover, the possibility of formation of a crotonate group during the propagation step of this polymerization is also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: anionic ring-opening polymerization; phenoxides; polyhydroxybutyrate; polymerization mechanism; β-butyrolactone; β-lactones
Year: 2019 PMID: 31336650 PMCID: PMC6680796 DOI: 10.3390/polym11071221
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1β-butyrolactone molecule with carbon description and possible nucleophile attack positions in anionic BL polymerization.
Results of BL polymerization initiated with selected sodium phenoxides a.
| Entry b | Initiator | Mn,th d [g·mol−1] | Mn,NMR e [g·mol−1] | Mn,SEC [g·mol−1] | Đ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | sodium | 1100 | 1350 | 1300 | 1.19 |
| 2 | sodium | 1100 | 1150 | 1100 | 1.25 |
| 3 | sodium 1-naphtoxide | 1100 | 800 | 800 | 1.22 |
| 4 | sodium phenoxide | 1100 | 900 | 800 | 1.21 |
| 5 | sodium | 1100 | 850 | 950 | 1.13 |
| 6 | sodium | 10000 | 3400 | 3800 | 1.62 |
| 7 | sodium | 10000 | 3050 | 4400 | 1.62 |
| 8 | sodium 1-naphtoxide | 10000 | 3000 | 4100 | 1.76 |
| 9 | sodium phenoxide | 10000 | 2400 | 4600 | 1.90 |
| 10 | sodium | 10000 | 3100 | 4100 | 1.78 |
| 11 c | sodium phenoxide | 10000 | 7200 | 10200 | 1.27 |
| 12 c | sodium | 10000 | 7000 | 9100 | 1.21 |
a Polymerizations were carried out in DMSO solvent (BL concentration was 1mol/L) at room temperature up to 100% conversion of monomer; b Polymerization time: entries 1–5: 2 days, entries 6–10: 14 days and entries 11–12: 5 days; c Monomer concentration—8 mol/L; d Calculated form equation: Mnth = [M]0 × 86/[I]0 where [M]0 and [I]0—monomer and initiator concentration, 86—molar mass of BL; e Estimated form 1H NMR from equation: MnNMR = (polymC × 86)/(PhOC+ HOC + =C).
Figure 21H NMR spectrum (CDCl3, 600MHz) of poly(3-hydroxybutyrate) obtained via AROP of BL initiated with sodium phenoxide.
Figure 3ESI-MS (positive-ion mode) of poly(3-hydroxybutyrate) obtained via AROP of BL initiated with sodium phenoxide; series an—sodium adducts of α-hydroxy-ω-carboxylate-PHB chains (ESI-MS2 fragmentation spectrum (positive-ion mode) of corresponding parent ion m/z 1073 is shown in Figure 3b); series bn—sodium adducts of α-crotonate-ω-carboxylate-PHB chains (ESI-MS2 fragmentation spectrum (positive-ion mode) of corresponding parent ion m/z 1055 is shown in Figure 3c), series cn—α-phenoxy-ω-carboxylate-PHB chains (ESI-MS2 fragmentation spectrum (positive-ion mode) of corresponding parent ion m/z 1063 is shown in Figure 3a). Index n corresponds to the number of PHB repeating units.
Scheme 1AROP of β-butyrolactone initiated with sodium phenoxide (for simplicity, the Na+ counterion is omitted).
Figure 4Ratio of crotonate, phenoxy and hydroxy initial groups in the polymer depending on the initiator used (estimated from 1H NMR measurements; pKa values presented in parenthesis correspond to phenols used [38]).