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“Exhaustive” Baeyer-Villiger Oxidation of Poly(Methyl Vinyl Ketone) and Its Copolymers
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Poly(vinyl acetate) and its
copolymers represent an important class of commodity polymers. However, the
preparation of copolymers of vinyl acetate (VAc) and more activated monomers
(MAMs)
via
copolymerization is
greatly restricted due to their disparate reactivities. Issues relating to
reactivity ratios remain a fundamental challenge in copolymerization. Herein,
we describe a post-polymerization modification approach using poly(methyl vinyl
ketone-
co
-MAM)s as substrates to
access synthetically challenging poly(VAc-
co
-MAM)s.
Although the direct translations of existing small-molecule Baeyer-Villiger
(BV) protocols into a post-polymerization modification method failed, a
mechanism-guided multi-parameter optimization on polymer substrates disclosed a
set of unique “exhaustive” BV protocols which enabled a nearly quantitative
functionalization without obvious chain scission or cross-linking. Furthermore,
a one-pot copolymerization/“exhaustive” BV post-modification procedure was
developed to produce such copolymers in a convenient and scalable manner. This user-friendly
methodology is able to access diverse poly(VAc-
co
-MAM)s including both statistical and narrow-dispersed block
copolymers and could greatly facilitate the exploration of applications with
such materials.
American Chemical Society (ACS)
Title: “Exhaustive” Baeyer-Villiger Oxidation of Poly(Methyl Vinyl Ketone) and Its Copolymers
Description:
Poly(vinyl acetate) and its
copolymers represent an important class of commodity polymers.
However, the
preparation of copolymers of vinyl acetate (VAc) and more activated monomers
(MAMs)
via
copolymerization is
greatly restricted due to their disparate reactivities.
Issues relating to
reactivity ratios remain a fundamental challenge in copolymerization.
Herein,
we describe a post-polymerization modification approach using poly(methyl vinyl
ketone-
co
-MAM)s as substrates to
access synthetically challenging poly(VAc-
co
-MAM)s.
Although the direct translations of existing small-molecule Baeyer-Villiger
(BV) protocols into a post-polymerization modification method failed, a
mechanism-guided multi-parameter optimization on polymer substrates disclosed a
set of unique “exhaustive” BV protocols which enabled a nearly quantitative
functionalization without obvious chain scission or cross-linking.
Furthermore,
a one-pot copolymerization/“exhaustive” BV post-modification procedure was
developed to produce such copolymers in a convenient and scalable manner.
This user-friendly
methodology is able to access diverse poly(VAc-
co
-MAM)s including both statistical and narrow-dispersed block
copolymers and could greatly facilitate the exploration of applications with
such materials.
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