| Literature DB >> 31921769 |
Jozef Kollár1, Martin Danko1, Falko Pippig1, Jaroslav Mosnáček1,2.
Abstract
Sustainable chemistry requires application of green processes and often starting materials originate from renewable resources. Biomass-derived monomers based on five-membered γ-butyrolactone ring represent suitable candidates to replace sources of fossil origin. α-Methylene-γ-butyrolactone, β-hydroxy-α-methylene-γ-butyrolactone, and β- and γ-methyl-α-methylene-γ-butyrolactones bearing exocyclic double bond are available directly by isolation from plants or derived from itaconic or levulinic acids available from biomass feedstock. Exocyclic double bond with structural similarity with methacrylates is highly reactive in chain-growth polymerization. Reaction involves the linking of monomer molecules through vinyl double bonds in the presence of initiators typical for radical, anionic, zwitterionic, group-transfer, organocatalytic, and coordination polymerizations. The formed polymers containing pendant ring are characterized by high glass transition temperature (T g > 195°C) and render decent heat, weathering, scratch, and solvent resistance. The monomers can also be hydrolyzed to open the lactone ring and form water-soluble monomers. Subsequent radical copolymerization in the presence of cross-linker can yield to hydrogels with superior degree of swelling and highly tunable characteristics, depending on the external stimuli. The five-membered lactone ring allows copolymerization of these compounds by ring opening polymerization to provide polyesters with preserved methylene functionality. In addition, both the lactone ring and the methylene double bond can be attacked by amines. Polyaddition with di- or multi-amines leads to functional poly(amidoamines) with properties tunable by structure of the amines. In this mini-review, we summarize the synthetic procedures for preparation of polymeric materials with interesting properties, including thermoplastic elastomers, acrylic latexes, stimuli-sensitive superabsorbent hydrogels, functional biocompatible polyesters, and poly(amidoamines).Entities:
Keywords: ATRP; Tulipalin A; methacrylates; polyamidoamines; polyesters; sustainability
Year: 2019 PMID: 31921769 PMCID: PMC6923188 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2019.00845
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Figure 1A scheme of polymerization routes for preparation of (co)polymers from MBL derivatives.
A summary of properties of polymers from MBL derivatives.
| PMBL | Free radical, ATRP, photoATRP, coordination | Amorphous, atactic, | Akkapeddi, |
| Anionic | Isotactic, soluble in DMF, and DMSO | Akkapeddi, | |
| PMBL brushes | Surface-initiated ATRP | Stable friction coefficient, scratch resistance | Higaki et al., |
| Poly(γ-MMBL) | Radical, anionic, miniemulsion, group-transfer, coordination | Racemic—good solubility in organic solvents; | Suenaga et al., |
| Poly(β-MMBL) | Radical | Soluble in DMSO and acetonitrile | Pittman and Lee, |
| Coordination | highly isotactic polymer, insoluble in common organic solvents, | Hu et al., | |
| Triblock PMBL-b-PBA- | ATRP | Properties of thermoplastic elastomers; high temperature stability up to >300°C | Mosnáček et al., |
| AM-co-SHMB and AM-co-SHMeMB networks | Free radical copolymerization of hydrolyzed MBL derivatives | Superabsorbent hydrogels, stimuli sensitive, low cytotoxicity, and low fytotoxicity | Kollár et al., |
| Linear or starlike P(MBL- | Ring opening polymerization | Hydrolyzable, (multi)functional—possible carriers of active compounds through thiol-ene click | Hong and Chen, |
| P(MBL- | Ring opening polymerization with subsequent free radical copolymerization with methacrylates | Hydrolyzable gels, shape-memory | Zhou et al., |