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New Vistas on the Anionic Polymerization of Styrene in Non-Polar Solvents by Means of Density Functional Theory

The elementary processes of anionic styrene polymerization in the gas phase and in cyclohexane were studied using M062X (a recently developed density functional theory (DFT) method) combined with the 6-31+G(d) basis sets, in order to clarify the complicated phenomena caused by the association of the...

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Autores principales: Morita, Hideo, Van Beylen, Marcel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6431960/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30974649
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym8100371
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author Morita, Hideo
Van Beylen, Marcel
author_facet Morita, Hideo
Van Beylen, Marcel
author_sort Morita, Hideo
collection PubMed
description The elementary processes of anionic styrene polymerization in the gas phase and in cyclohexane were studied using M062X (a recently developed density functional theory (DFT) method) combined with the 6-31+G(d) basis sets, in order to clarify the complicated phenomena caused by the association of the active chain-ends and elucidate the details of the polymerization mechanism. Three types of HSt(2)Li (a model structure of polystyryllithium chain-ends) were obtained; the well-known first structure in which Li is coordinated to the side chain, the second structure in which Li is coordinated to the phenyl ring, (both without the penultimate unit coordination), and the third structure in which Li is coordinated to both the chain-end unit and the penultimate styrene unit. Although the third HSt(2)Li is the most stable as expected, the free energy for the transition state of its reaction with styrene is higher than those for the other two transition states due to its steric hindrance. The free energy for the transition state of the reaction of the second HSt(2)Li with styrene is the lowest, suggesting that the route through it is the predominant reaction path. The penultimate unit effect, slower addition of styrene to HSt(2)Li than to HStLi, is attributed to coordination of the penultimate styrene units of the polystyryllithium dimer (one of the starting materials) to its Li atoms. The calculated enthalpy for the reaction barrier of the second HSt(2)Li with styrene in cyclohexane was found to agree with the observed apparent activation energy in benzene.
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spelling pubmed-64319602019-04-02 New Vistas on the Anionic Polymerization of Styrene in Non-Polar Solvents by Means of Density Functional Theory Morita, Hideo Van Beylen, Marcel Polymers (Basel) Article The elementary processes of anionic styrene polymerization in the gas phase and in cyclohexane were studied using M062X (a recently developed density functional theory (DFT) method) combined with the 6-31+G(d) basis sets, in order to clarify the complicated phenomena caused by the association of the active chain-ends and elucidate the details of the polymerization mechanism. Three types of HSt(2)Li (a model structure of polystyryllithium chain-ends) were obtained; the well-known first structure in which Li is coordinated to the side chain, the second structure in which Li is coordinated to the phenyl ring, (both without the penultimate unit coordination), and the third structure in which Li is coordinated to both the chain-end unit and the penultimate styrene unit. Although the third HSt(2)Li is the most stable as expected, the free energy for the transition state of its reaction with styrene is higher than those for the other two transition states due to its steric hindrance. The free energy for the transition state of the reaction of the second HSt(2)Li with styrene is the lowest, suggesting that the route through it is the predominant reaction path. The penultimate unit effect, slower addition of styrene to HSt(2)Li than to HStLi, is attributed to coordination of the penultimate styrene units of the polystyryllithium dimer (one of the starting materials) to its Li atoms. The calculated enthalpy for the reaction barrier of the second HSt(2)Li with styrene in cyclohexane was found to agree with the observed apparent activation energy in benzene. MDPI 2016-10-20 /pmc/articles/PMC6431960/ /pubmed/30974649 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym8100371 Text en © 2016 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Morita, Hideo
Van Beylen, Marcel
New Vistas on the Anionic Polymerization of Styrene in Non-Polar Solvents by Means of Density Functional Theory
title New Vistas on the Anionic Polymerization of Styrene in Non-Polar Solvents by Means of Density Functional Theory
title_full New Vistas on the Anionic Polymerization of Styrene in Non-Polar Solvents by Means of Density Functional Theory
title_fullStr New Vistas on the Anionic Polymerization of Styrene in Non-Polar Solvents by Means of Density Functional Theory
title_full_unstemmed New Vistas on the Anionic Polymerization of Styrene in Non-Polar Solvents by Means of Density Functional Theory
title_short New Vistas on the Anionic Polymerization of Styrene in Non-Polar Solvents by Means of Density Functional Theory
title_sort new vistas on the anionic polymerization of styrene in non-polar solvents by means of density functional theory
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6431960/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30974649
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym8100371
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