Living cationic polymerization
Living cationic polymerization is a living polymerization technique involving cationic propagating species. It enables the synthesis of very well defined polymers and of polymers with unusual architecture such as star polymers and block copolymers and living cationic polymerization is therefore as such of commercial and academic interest.
Basics
In carbocationic polymerization the active site is a carbocation with a counterion in close proximity. The basic reaction steps are:- Chain propagation:
- Chain termination:
- chain transfer:
Common monomers are vinyl ethers, alpha-methyl vinyl ethers, isobutene, styrene, methylstyrene and N-vinylcarbazole. The monomer is nucleophilic and substituents should be able to stabilize a positive carbocationic charge. For example, para-methoxystyrene is more reactive than styrene itself.
Initiation takes place by an initiation/coinitiation binary system, for example an alcohol and a Lewis acid. The active electrophile is then a proton and the counter ion the remaining alkoxide which is stabilized by the Lewis acid. With organic acetates such as cumyl acetate the initiating species is the carbocation R+ and the counterion is the acetate anion. In the iodine/hydrogen iodide system the electrophile is again a proton and the carbocation is stabilized by the triiodide ion. Polymerizations with diethylaluminium chloride rely on trace amounts of water. A proton is then accompanied by the counterion Et2AlClOH−. With tert-butyl chloride Et2AlCl abstracts a chlorine atom to form the tert-butyl carbocation as the electrophile. Efficient initiators that resemble the monomer are called cationogens. Termination and chain transfer are minimized when the initiator counterion is both non-nucleophilic and non-basic. More polar solvents promote ion dissociation and hence increase molar mass.
Common additives are electron donors, salts and proton traps. Electron donors for example dimethylsulfide and dimethylsulfoxide are believed to stabilize the carbocation. The addition of salt for example a tetraalkylammonium salt, prevents dissociation of the ion pair that is the propagating reactive site. Ion dissociation into free ions lead to non-living polymerization. Proton traps scavenge protons originating from protic impurities.
History
The method was developed starting in the 1970s and 1980s with contributions from Higashimura on the polymerization of p-methoxystyrene using iodine or acetyl perchlorate, on the polymerization of isobutyl vinyl ether by iodine and with Mitsuo Sawamoto by iodine/HI and on the formation of p-methoxystyrene - isobutyl vinyl ether block copolymers.Kennedy and Faust studied methylstyrene / boron trichloride polymerization in 1982 and that of isobutylene in 1984
Around same time Kennedy and Mishra discovered very efficient living polymerization of isobutylene that paved the way for rapid development of macromolecularly engineered polymers.