화학공학소재연구정보센터
Macromolecules, Vol.38, No.7, 2665-2673, 2005
Kinetics and mechanism of L-lactide polymerization by rare earth metal silylamido complexes: Effect of alcohol addition
The ring-opening polymerization of L-lactide initiated by rare earth metal silylamido complexes [Ln(OSSO){N(SiHMe2)(2)}(THF)] (1-3: Ln = Y, Lu; OSSO = 1, omega-dithiaalkanediyl-bridged bisphenolato) was studied. MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry and H-1 NMR spectroscopy suggested that the polymerization proceeded via a conventional coordination-insertion mechanism involving silylamide ligand as the initiating group and the cleavage of acyl-oxygen bond of the monomer. A two-stage linear relationship between In([LA](0)/[LA](t)) and the polymerization time was observed for the yttrium complex [Y(pdtbp){N(SiHMe2)(2)}(THF)] (pdtbp = 1,5-dithiapentanediyl-bis{4,6-di-tert-butylphenolato}, 3). In both stages, the polymerization showed first-order kinetics for the monomer concentration. The first-order dependency of the initiator concentration was only observed when the monomer conversion to PLA was less than 50-60%. The aggregation of the active growing polymer chain into dimeric structure occurred in the second stage. In contrast, the in situ generated alkoxide initiator [Ln(OSSO){N(SiHMe2)(2)}(THF)]/ (PrOH)-Pr-i showed a different behavior. When 3 was reacted with 2-propanol in 1:2 ratio, the in situ generated alkoxides initiated the living polymerization Of L-lactide. Neither aggregation nor intramolecular transesterification was observed over the entire conversion range. Polylactides with controlled molecular parameters (M-n, end groups) and low polydispersities were formed as a result of fast alkoxide/alcohol. exchange.