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A Dinuclear Mechanism Implicated in Controlled Carbene Polymerization.

Aleksandr V ZhukhovitskiyIlia J KobylianskiiAndy A ThomasAustin M EvansConnor P DelaneyNathan C FlandersScott E DenmarkWilliam R DichtelF Dean Toste
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2019)
Carbene polymerization provides polyolefins that cannot be readily prepared from olefin monomers; however, controlled and living carbene polymerization has been a long-standing challenge. Here we report a new class of initiators, (π-allyl)palladium carboxylate dimers, which polymerize ethyl diazoacetate, a carbene precursor in a controlled and quasi-living manner, with nearly quantitative yields, degrees of polymerization >100, molecular weight dispersities 1.2-1.4, and well-defined, diversifiable chain ends. This method also provides block copolycarbenes that undergo microphase segregation. Experimental and theoretical mechanistic analysis supports a new dinuclear mechanism for this process.
Keyphrases
  • high resolution
  • data analysis