Highly Selective O‑Phenylene Bisurea Catalysts for ROP: Stabilization of Oxyanion Transition State by a Semiflexible Hydrogen Bond Pocket

Organocatalyzed ring-opening polymerization (ROP) is a versatile technique for synthesizing biodegradable polymers, including polyesters and polycarbonates. We introduce o-phenylene bisurea (OPBU) (di)­anions as a novel class of organocatalysts that are fast, easily tunable, mildly basic, and except...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2024-08, Vol.146 (32), p.22295-22305
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Jia, Lui, Kai Hin, Zunino, Rachele, Jia, Yuan, Morodo, Romain, Warlin, Niklas, Hedrick, James L., Talarico, Giovanni, Waymouth, Robert M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Organocatalyzed ring-opening polymerization (ROP) is a versatile technique for synthesizing biodegradable polymers, including polyesters and polycarbonates. We introduce o-phenylene bisurea (OPBU) (di)­anions as a novel class of organocatalysts that are fast, easily tunable, mildly basic, and exceptionally selective. These catalysts surpass previous generations, such as thiourea, urea, and TBD, in selectivity (k p/k tr) by 8 to 120 times. OPBU catalysts facilitate the ROP of various monomers, achieving high conversions (>95%) in seconds to minutes, producing polymers with precise molecular weights and very low dispersities (Đ ≈ 1.01). This performance nearly matches the ideal distribution expected from living polymerization (Poisson distribution). Density functional theory (DFT) calculations reveal that the catalysts stabilize the oxyanion transition state via a hydrogen bond pocket similar to the “oxyanion hole” in enzymatic catalysis. Both experimental and theoretical analyses highlight the critical role of the semirigid o-phenylene linker in creating a hydrogen bond pocket that is tight yet flexible enough to accommodate the oxyanion transition state effectively. These new insights have provided a new class of organic catalysts whose accessibility, moderate basicity, excellent solubility, and unparalleled selectivity and tunability open up new opportunities for controlled polymer synthesis.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/jacs.4c04740