Polyolefin-Polar Block Copolymers from Versatile New Macromonomers.
Christopher J KayPaul D GoringConnah A BurnettBen HornbyKenneth LewtasShaun MorrisColin MortonTony McNallyGiles W TheakerCarl WatersonPeter M WrightPeter ScottPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2018)
A new metallocene-based polymerization mechanism is elucidated in which a zirconium hydride center inserts α-methylstyrene at the start of a polymer chain. The hydride is then regenerated by hydrogenation to release a polyolefin containing a single terminal α-methylstyrenyl group. Through the use of the difunctional monomer 1,3-diisopropenylbenzene, this catalytic hydride insertion polymerization is applied to the production of linear polyethylene and ethylene-hexene copolymers containing an isopropenylbenzene end group. Conducting simple radical polymerizations in the presence of this new type of macromonomer leads to diblock copolymers containing a polyolefin attached to an acrylate, methacrylate, vinyl ester, or styrenic segments. The new materials are readily available and exhibit interfacial phenomena, including the mediation of the mixing of immiscible polymer blends.