Abstract
Carbon-element bond formation is a key point of synthetic methodology for incorporating a wide variety of metallic or metalloid elements in polymer main chains. Radical 'bismetallation' to carbon-carbon triple bonds based on homolytic cleavage of element-element single bonds is one of the most useful and highly atom-economical methods for carbon-element bond formation. Syntheses of novel polymers containing group 15 elements have been achieved by ring-collapsed radical alternating copolymerization (RCRAC) of homocyclic compounds with rings built exclusively of group 15 elements with acetylenic compounds. Poly(vinylene-arsine)s were successfully prepared by a radical reaction between pentamethylpentacycloarsine (cyclo-MeAs)5 or hexaphenylhexacycloarsine (cvclo-(PhAs)6) and mono-substituted acetylenic compounds using 2,2′-azobisisobutyronitrile (AIBN) as a radical initiator or irradiation with xenon lamp at room temperature. Without any radical initiator at 25 -C, cyclo-(MeAs)5 caused cleavage of the arsenic-arsenic bond spontaneously and copolymerized with phenylacetylene to give poly(vinylenc-arsine)s. The copolymers obtained showed fluorescence properties which were influenced by the substituent of the acetylenic compounds. Poly(vinylene-phosphine)s and poly(vinylene-stibine)s were also prepared by RCRAC of cyclo-(MeP)5 and cyclo-(PhSb)6 with alkynes, respectively. Different reactivity of pnictogen radicals made it possible to construct the periodic vinylene-arsine-vinylene-stibine backbone. The radical terpolymerization of cyclo-(McAs)5, phenylacetylene, and a vinyl monomer and radical copolymerization of cyclic diarsine with vinyl monomers were also described. © 2008 The Society of Polymer Science, Japan.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Naka, K. (2008). Synthesis of polymers containing group 15 elements via bismetallation of acetylenic compounds. Polymer Journal, 40(11), 1031–1041. https://doi.org/10.1295/polymj.PJ2008077
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.