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Switching from Controlled Ring-Opening Polymerization (cROP) to Controlled Ring-Closing Depolymerization (cRCDP) by Adjusting the Reaction Parameters That Determine the Ceiling Temperature
Author(s) -
Peter Olsén,
Jenny Undin,
Karin Odelius,
Helmut Keul,
AnnChristine Albertsson
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
biomacromolecules
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.689
H-Index - 220
eISSN - 1526-4602
pISSN - 1525-7797
DOI - 10.1021/acs.biomac.6b01375
Subject(s) - depolymerization , monomer , polymerization , polymer , polymer chemistry , kinetic chain length , bulk polymerization , chemistry , chain transfer , ring opening polymerization , branching (polymer chemistry) , chain growth polymerization , solution polymerization , materials science , chemical engineering , radical polymerization , organic chemistry , engineering
Full control over the ceiling temperature (T c ) enables a selective transition between the monomeric and polymeric state. This is exemplified by the conversion of the monomer 2-allyloxymethyl-2-ethyl-trimethylene carbonate (AOMEC) to poly(AOMEC) and back to AOMEC within 10 h by controlling the reaction from conditions that favor ring-opening polymerization (T c > T 0 ) (where T 0 is the reaction temperature) to conditions that favor ring-closing depolymerization (T c < T 0 ). The ring-closing depolymerization (RCDP) mirrors the polymerization behavior with a clear relation between the monomer concentration and the molecular weight of the polymer, indicating that RCDP occurs at the chain end. The T c of the polymerization system is highly dependent on the nature of the solvent, for example, in toluene, the T c of AOMEC is 234 °C and in acetonitrile T c = 142 °C at the same initial monomer concentration of 2 M. The control over the monomer to polymer equilibrium sets new standards for the selective degradation of polymers, the controlled release of active components, monomer synthesis and material recycling. In particular, the knowledge of the monomer to polymer equilibrium of polymers in solution under selected environmental conditions is of paramount importance for in vivo applications, where the polymer chain is subjected to both high dilution and a high polarity medium in the presence of catalysts, that is, very different conditions from which the polymer was formed.

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