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Selective Photoactivation: From a Single Unit Monomer Insertion Reaction to Controlled Polymer Architectures

305

Citations

96

References

2016

Year

Abstract

Here, we exploit the selectivity of photoactivation of thiocarbonylthio compounds to implement two distinct organic and polymer synthetic methodologies: (1) a single unit monomer insertion (SUMI) reaction and (2) selective, controlled radical polymerization via a visible-light-mediated photoinduced electron/energy transfer-reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (PET-RAFT) process. In the first method, precise single unit monomer insertion into a dithiobenzoate with a high reaction yield (>97%) is reported using an organic photoredox catalyst, pheophorbide a (PheoA), under red light irradiation (λmax = 635 nm, 0.4 mW/cm(2)). The exceptional selectivity of PheoA toward dithiobenzoate was utilized in combination with another catalyst, zinc tetraphenylporphine (ZnTPP), for the preparation of a complex macromolecular architecture. PheoA was first employed to selectively activate a dithiobenzoate, 4-cyanopentanoic acid dithiobenzoate, for the polymerization of a methacrylate backbone under red light irradiation. Subsequently, metalloporphyrin ZnTPP was utilized to selectively activate pendant trithiocarbonate moieties for the polymerization of acrylates under green light (λmax = 530 nm, 0.6 mW/cm(2)) to yield well-defined graft co-polymers.

References

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