Design, Synthesis, and Properties of Substituted Polyacetylenes

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Abstract

This article reviews recent topics on the polymerization of substituted acetylenes, focusing on the synthesis of poly(diphenylacetylenes) and the living polymerization of phenylacetylenes. Diphenylacetylene (DPA) polymerizes with TaCl5-n-Bu4Sn to give a polymer which is thermally very stable but insoluble in any solvents. DPAs with various groups (e.g., p-Me3Si, m-Me3Ge, p-t-Bu, and p-PhO) polymerize similarly. These polymers are soluble and their MW's reach 1 × 106 to 3 × 106. Some of them are more gas-permeable than poly(dimethylsiloxane). Several acetylenes (e.g., ClC=C-n-C6H13 and HC=C-t-Bu) have been found to undergo living polymerization with MoOCl4-n-Bu4Sn-EtOH. Whereas phenylacetylene (PA) does not polymerize in a living fashion, ortho-substituents in PA more or less suppress termination and chain transfer. PAs with bulky ortho groups (e.g., CF3 and Me3Ge) especially undergo virtually ideal living polymerization. © 1994, Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. All rights reserved.

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Masuda, T., & Tachimori, H. (1994). Design, Synthesis, and Properties of Substituted Polyacetylenes. Journal of Macromolecular Science, Part A, 31(11), 1675–1690. https://doi.org/10.1080/10601329408545876

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