TY - JOUR
T1 - Scalable Frontal Oligomerization
T2 - Insights from Advanced Mass Analysis
AU - Suslick, Benjamin A.
AU - Alzate-Sanchez, Diego M.
AU - Moore, Jeffrey S.
N1 - This work was primarily funded by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (Center of Excellence Phase II) under Award FA95550-20-1-0194, the Advanced Research Projects Agency–Energy under the primary Award DE-AR0001330, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency under Award HR0011-22-C-0057, the Department of Energy under Award N000426132, and the Department of Energy (Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Energy Fronteir Research Center) under an Award titled Regenerative Energy-Efficient Manufacturing of Thermoset Polymeric Materials (REMAT). We thank Javier Balta, Dr. Julian Cooper, Dr. Oleg Davydovich, Dr. Jacob Lessard, Dr. William Neary, Katherine Stawiasz, and Aliza Yazdani for insightful discussions. We acknowledge Dr. Xiuli Mao and the School of Chemical Sciences Mass Spectrometry Lab (UIUC) for acquisition of MALDI data using a MALDI TOFTOF mass spectrometer purchased in part with a grant from the National Center for Research Resources, National Institutes of Health, under Award S10 RR027109 A.
PY - 2022/9/27
Y1 - 2022/9/27
N2 - Linear oligomers of dicyclopentadiene (DCPD) are reactive precursors for thermoplastic and thermoset materials. Unlike the foul-smelling parent monomer, oligomers composed of DCPD are odorless. With appropriate modification of the end-group or backbone chemistry, telechelic DCPD oligomers have potential utility as cross-linkers and as macromonomer precursors for block and graft copolymers. Most existing methods to produce oligo-DCPD, however, require solvent, are relatively slow, and necessitate air-free techniques. Here we show that frontal ring-opening metathesis oligomerization (FROMO) of neat DCPD and other norbornene derivatives rapidly generates hundreds of grams of material in minutes with catalyst loadings of 0.5 mM. This energy-efficient catalytic process utilizes the heat generated by the reaction to self-propagate oligomerization throughout the liquid monomer. FROMO employs a terminal olefin (e.g., styrene) in which a cross-metathesis reaction (i.e., chain transfer) competes with ring-opening metathesis (i.e., propagation). Kendrick mass analysis enables rapid identification and assignment of all the chain-end types present and quantifies the degree of branching resulting from the infrequent cyclopentene ring-opening reaction. This analytical technique also detects oligomer species derived from trace impurities in the monomer or chain-transfer agent that are otherwise difficult to observe with other characterization methods. The obtained oligomers possess well-defined chain-ends and molecular weight distributions.
AB - Linear oligomers of dicyclopentadiene (DCPD) are reactive precursors for thermoplastic and thermoset materials. Unlike the foul-smelling parent monomer, oligomers composed of DCPD are odorless. With appropriate modification of the end-group or backbone chemistry, telechelic DCPD oligomers have potential utility as cross-linkers and as macromonomer precursors for block and graft copolymers. Most existing methods to produce oligo-DCPD, however, require solvent, are relatively slow, and necessitate air-free techniques. Here we show that frontal ring-opening metathesis oligomerization (FROMO) of neat DCPD and other norbornene derivatives rapidly generates hundreds of grams of material in minutes with catalyst loadings of 0.5 mM. This energy-efficient catalytic process utilizes the heat generated by the reaction to self-propagate oligomerization throughout the liquid monomer. FROMO employs a terminal olefin (e.g., styrene) in which a cross-metathesis reaction (i.e., chain transfer) competes with ring-opening metathesis (i.e., propagation). Kendrick mass analysis enables rapid identification and assignment of all the chain-end types present and quantifies the degree of branching resulting from the infrequent cyclopentene ring-opening reaction. This analytical technique also detects oligomer species derived from trace impurities in the monomer or chain-transfer agent that are otherwise difficult to observe with other characterization methods. The obtained oligomers possess well-defined chain-ends and molecular weight distributions.
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U2 - 10.1021/acs.macromol.2c01654
DO - 10.1021/acs.macromol.2c01654
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85138779924
SN - 0024-9297
VL - 55
SP - 8234
EP - 8241
JO - Macromolecules
JF - Macromolecules
IS - 18
ER -