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Transition Metal-Catalyzed Synthesis of Silicon Polymers

88

Citations

68

References

1995

Year

Abstract

Abstract Si–H and Si–Si bonds are efficiently transformed by early and late transition metal catalyses that involve possible key elemental steps, such as σ-bond metathesis, the oxidative addition of Si–H and Si–Si bonds, insertion of unsaturated compounds into silylmetals, the reductive elimination of Si–Si and Si–C bonds, and silylene generation via α-substituent migration in silylmetal species. These catalyses have enabled us to develop a dehydrogenative poly/oligosilane formation from hydrosilanes, oligosilane formation via a redistribution of hydrodisilanes, silylene-phenylene polymer synthesis via a redistribution of bis(trihydrosilyl)benzene, and (step-)ladder polycarbosilane synthesis by a dehydrogenative double silylation of diynes with a tetrakis(hydrosilyl)benzene. Insertion of unsaturated compounds (acetylenes, quinones, etc.) into Si–Si bonds of polymer backbones provides a new methodology for the modification/synthesis of silicon polymers. Cyclooligosilanes and cyclic disilanes undergo ring-opening copolymerization with p-quinones to give silylene and arylenedioxy unit-containing polymers. Other relevant processes as well as some chemical and physicochemical properties (ceramization, electric conductivity, thermal stability, etc.) of the resulting polymers are also described.

References

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