A family of amphiphilic diblock copolymers containing a hydrophobic polyisobutylene (PIB, = 1000 g mol) segment and a hydrophilic block with sugar pendants has been synthesized by combining living cationic and reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization techniques; to explore their potential in insulin fibrillation inhibition. The glucose content in the hydrophilic segment has been tailor-made from 20 to 57 units to prepare block copolymers. The removal of the acetates from the pendent glucose units resulted in amphiphilic block copolymers that generated micellar aggregates in aqueous media.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis review presents the development of highly reactive polyisobutylene (HRPIB), a major commercial intermediate toward fuel and lubricant additives. Recent years have witnessed very substantial advances in the catalytic chain transfer polymerization (CCTP) of isobutylene/industrial Raffinate-1 (C4 Raffinate) to produce HRPIB, particularly in nonpolar solvents at elevated temperatures. The main subjects of this review are cationic polymerization of isobutylene, progress in HRPIB research and existing challenges, and recent advances of CCTP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPoly[2-(methacryloyloxy)ethyl oleate-co-pentafluorophenyl methacrylate] [P(MAEO-co-PFPMA)] random copolymers with oleate and pentafluorophenyl side-chain pendants were synthesized. These copolymers were utilized as dual-reactive polymeric scaffolds in a range of post-polymerization modification strategies involving thiol-ene and para-fluoro-thiol substitution, amidation, trans-esterification, and epoxidation followed by amidation. The 2-(methacryloyloxy)ethyl oleate (MAEO) functional handle in the copolymer is open to functionalization at its internal double bond through thermally initiated thiol-ene reaction, whereas the pentafluorophenyl moiety of the pentafluorophenyl methacrylate (PFPMA) unit undergoes para-fluoro-thiol substitution under basic conditions at room temperature.
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