1 research outputs found
Well-Defined Selenium-Containing Aliphatic Polycarbonates via Lipase-Catalyzed Ring-Opening Polymerization of Selenic Macrocyclic Carbonate Monomer
The synthesis of well-defined, biodegradable
selenium-containing
polymers remains a formidable challenge in polymer chemistry. Herein,
a selenic cyclic carbonate dimer monomer (M<sub>Se</sub>) was developed
to generate well-defined, biodegradable aliphatic polycarbonates with
selenide functionality on the backbone. The monomer was synthesized
via the intermolecular cyclization of diÂ(1-hydroxyethylene) selenide
and diphenyl carbonate with lipase CA as catalysts in a mass of anhydrous
toluene with very dilute monomer concentration. Then living ring-opening
polymerization (ROP) was executed by solution method using the same
lipase CA as catalysts. Similarly, the copolymerizations with commercial
trimethylene carbonate (TMC) generated random copolymers demonstrated
by <sup>13</sup>C NMR, regulating the density of selenium functional
groups. The resulting polymers exhibited a living polymerization characteristic,
as evidenced by polymerization kinetics, predictable molecular weights,
narrow molecular-weight distribution, and controlled copolymer compositions.
Using hydrophilic macroinitiators (PEG), amphiphilic di/triblock copolymers
could be obtained, suggesting their potential as controlled drug delivery
system (DDS) and hydrogel scaffolds for tissue engineering