TY - JOUR
T1 - Synthesis of Polycyclic Olefinic Monomers from Norbornadiene for Inverse Vulcanization
T2 - Structural and Mechanistic Consequences
AU - Marshall, Christopher M.
AU - Molineux, Jake
AU - Kang, Kyung Seok
AU - Kumirov, Vlad
AU - Kim, Kyung Jo
AU - Norwood, Robert A.
AU - Njardarson, Jon T.
AU - Pyun, Jeffrey
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2024/8/28
Y1 - 2024/8/28
N2 - The preparation of high-sulfur content organosulfur polymers has generated considerable interest as an emerging area in polymer science that has been driven by advances in the inverse vulcanization polymerization of elemental sulfur with organic comonomers. While numerous new inverse vulcanized polysulfides have been made over the past decade, insights into the mechanism of inverse vulcanization and structural characterization of the high-sulfur-content copolymers remain limited in scope. Furthermore, the exploration of new molecular architectures for organic comonomer synthesis remains an important frontier to enhance the properties of these new polymeric materials. In the current report, the first detailed study on the synthesis and inverse vulcanization of polycyclic rigid comonomers derived from norbornadiene was conducted, affording a quantitative assessment of polymer microstructure for these organopolysulfides and insights into the inverse vulcanization polymerization mechanism for this class of monomers. In particular, a stereoselective synthesis of the endo-exo norbornadiene cyclopentadiene adduct (Stillene) was achieved, which enabled direct comparison with the known exo-exo norbornadiene dimer (NBD2) previously used for inverse vulcanization. Reductive degradation of these sulfur copolymers and detailed structural analysis of the recovered sulfurated organic fragments revealed that remarkable exo-stereospecificity was achieved in the inverse vulcanization of elemental sulfur with both these polycyclic dienyl comonomers, which correlated to the robust thermomechanical properties associated with organopolysulfides made from NBD2 previously. Melt processing and molding of these sulfur copolymers were conducted to fabricate free-standing plastic lenses for long-wave infrared thermal imaging.
AB - The preparation of high-sulfur content organosulfur polymers has generated considerable interest as an emerging area in polymer science that has been driven by advances in the inverse vulcanization polymerization of elemental sulfur with organic comonomers. While numerous new inverse vulcanized polysulfides have been made over the past decade, insights into the mechanism of inverse vulcanization and structural characterization of the high-sulfur-content copolymers remain limited in scope. Furthermore, the exploration of new molecular architectures for organic comonomer synthesis remains an important frontier to enhance the properties of these new polymeric materials. In the current report, the first detailed study on the synthesis and inverse vulcanization of polycyclic rigid comonomers derived from norbornadiene was conducted, affording a quantitative assessment of polymer microstructure for these organopolysulfides and insights into the inverse vulcanization polymerization mechanism for this class of monomers. In particular, a stereoselective synthesis of the endo-exo norbornadiene cyclopentadiene adduct (Stillene) was achieved, which enabled direct comparison with the known exo-exo norbornadiene dimer (NBD2) previously used for inverse vulcanization. Reductive degradation of these sulfur copolymers and detailed structural analysis of the recovered sulfurated organic fragments revealed that remarkable exo-stereospecificity was achieved in the inverse vulcanization of elemental sulfur with both these polycyclic dienyl comonomers, which correlated to the robust thermomechanical properties associated with organopolysulfides made from NBD2 previously. Melt processing and molding of these sulfur copolymers were conducted to fabricate free-standing plastic lenses for long-wave infrared thermal imaging.
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U2 - 10.1021/jacs.4c08113
DO - 10.1021/jacs.4c08113
M3 - Article
C2 - 39143005
AN - SCOPUS:85201284253
SN - 0002-7863
VL - 146
SP - 24061
EP - 24074
JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
IS - 34
ER -