Why So Slow? Mechanistic Insights from Studies of a Poor Catalyst for Polymerization of ε-Caprolactone.

Inorg Chem

Department of Chemistry, Center for Sustainable Polymers, Chemical Theory Center, and Minnesota Supercomputing Institute (MSI), University of Minnesota, 207 Pleasant Street SE, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, United States.

Published: January 2017

Polymerization of ε-caprolactone (CL) using an aluminum alkoxide catalyst (1) designed to prevent unproductive trans binding was monitored at 110 °C in toluene-d by H NMR and the concentration versus time data fit to a first-order rate expression. A comparison of t for 1 to values for many other aluminum alkyl and alkoxide complexes shows much lower activity of 1 toward polymerization of CL. Density functional theory calculations were used to understand the basis for the slow kinetics. The optimized geometry of the ligand framework of 1 was found indeed to make CL trans binding difficult: no trans-bound intermediate could be identified as a local minimum. Nor were local minima for cis-bound precomplexes found, suggesting a concerted coordination-insertion for polymer initiation and propagation. The sluggish performance of 1 is attributed to a high-framework distortion energy required to deform the "resting" ligand geometry to that providing optimal catalysis in the corresponding transition-state structure geometry, thus suggesting a need to incorporate ligand flexibility in the design of efficient polymerization catalysts.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.6b02849DOI Listing

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