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Chemo- And Regioselective Functionalization of Isotactic Polypropylene: A Mechanistic and Structure-Property Study

  • Jill B. Williamson
  • , Christina G. Na
  • , Robert R. Johnson
  • , William F.M. Daniel
  • , Erik J. Alexanian
  • , Frank A. Leibfarth
  • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  • Department of Applied Physical Sciences

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

85 Scopus citations

Abstract

Polyolefins represent a high-volume class of polymers prized for their attractive thermomechanical properties, but the lack of chemical functionality on polyolefins makes them inadequate for many high-performance engineering applications. We report a metal-free postpolymerization modification approach to impart functionality onto branched polyolefins without the deleterious chain-coupling or chain-scission side reactions inherent to previous methods. The identification of conditions for thermally initiated polyolefin C-H functionalization combined with the development of new reagents enabled the addition of xanthates, trithiocarbonates, and dithiocarbamates to a variety of commercially available branched polyolefins. Systematic experimental and kinetic studies led to a mechanistic hypothesis that facilitated the rational design of reagents and reaction conditions for the thermally initiated C-H xanthylation of isotactic polypropylene (iPP) within a twin-screw extruder. A structure-property study showed that the functionalized iPP adheres to polar surfaces twice as strongly as commercial iPP while demonstrating similar tensile properties. The fundamental understanding of the elementary steps in amidyl radical-mediated polyolefin functionalization provided herein reveals key structure-reactivity relationships for the design of improved reagents, while the demonstration of chemoselective and scalable iPP functionalization to realize a material with improved adhesion properties indicates the translational potential of this method.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)12815-12823
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume141
Issue number32
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 14 2019

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