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Preparation and Characterization of H-Shaped Polylactide.

Aristotelis ZografosErin M MainesJoseph F HasslerFrank S BatesMarc A Hillmyer
Published in: ACS macro letters (2024)
An H-polymer has an architecture that consists of four branches symmetrically attached to the ends of a polymer backbone, similar in shape to the letter "H". Here, a renewable H-polymer efficiently synthesized using only ring-opening transesterification is demonstrated. The strategy relies on a tetrafunctional poly(±-lactide) macroinitiator, from which four poly(±-lactide) branches are grown simultaneously. 1 H NMR spectroscopy, size exclusion chromatography (SEC), and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) spectrometry were used to verify the macroinitiator purity. Branch growth was probed using 1 H NMR spectroscopy and SEC to reveal unique transesterification phenomena that can be controlled to yield architecturally pure or more complex materials. H-shaped PLA was prepared at the multigram scale with a weight-average molar mass M w > 100 kg/mol and low dispersity Đ < 1.15. Purification involved routine precipitations steps, which yielded products that were architecturally relatively pure (∼93%). Small-amplitude oscillatory shear and extensional rheology measurements demonstrate the unique viscoelastic behavior associated with the H-shaped architecture.
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