Abstract
Cationic terpolymerization of vinyl ether (VE), oxirane, and ketone successfully proceeded via unprecedented concurrent vinyl-addition, ring-opening, and carbonyl-addition mechanisms. In particular, the use of cyclohexene oxide as an oxirane resulted in terpolymerization via an exclusive one-way cycle, i.e., the reactions occurred only in the VE → oxirane, oxirane → ketone, and ketone → VE directions. Terpolymers that have repeating units of (VE ∼2 -oxirane ∼2 -ketone) n were obtained under appropriate conditions. In addition, no two-monomer combination achieved efficient copolymerization, which suggests that three specific types of crossover reactions are required for successful terpolymerization. The presence of a ketone, a compound that has rarely been employed as a monomer, is indispensable for a one-way cycle: terpolymerization also proceeded with an aliphatic aldehyde but resulted in two-way crossover reactions at the aldehyde-derived propagating ends. (Figure Presented).
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CITATION STYLE
Kanazawa, A., & Aoshima, S. (2015). Exclusive One-Way Cycle Sequence Control in Cationic Terpolymerization of General-Purpose Monomers via Concurrent Vinyl-Addition, Ring-Opening, and Carbonyl-Addition Mechanisms. ACS Macro Letters, 4(7), 783–787. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsmacrolett.5b00365
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