8 research outputs found
Hybrid Polycarbosilane-Siloxane Dendrimers: Synthesis and Properties
A series of carbosilane dendrimers of the 4th, 6th, and 7th generations with a terminal trimethylsilylsiloxane layer was synthesized. Theoretical models of these dendrimers were developed, and equilibrium dendrimer conformations obtained via molecular dynamics simulations were in a good agreement with experimental small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) data demonstrating molecule monodispersity and an almost spherical shape. It was confirmed that the glass transition temperature is independent of the dendrimer generation, but is greatly affected by the chemical nature of the dendrimer terminal groups. A sharp increase in the zero-shear viscosity of dendrimer melts was found between the 5th and the 7th dendrimer generations, which was qualitatively identical to that previously reported for polycarbosilane dendrimers with butyl terminal groups. The viscoelastic properties of high-generation dendrimers seem to follow some general trends with an increase in the generation number, which are determined by the regular branching structure of dendrimers
Thermodynamic Properties of the First-Generation Hybrid Dendrimer with “Carbosilane Core/Phenylene Shell” Structure
The molar heat capacity of the first-generation hybrid dendrimer with a “carbosilane core/phenylene shell” structure was measured for the first time in the temperature range T = 6–600 K using a precise adiabatic vacuum calorimeter and DSC. In the above temperature interval, the glass transition of the studied compound was observed, and its thermodynamic characteristics were determined. The standard thermodynamic functions (the enthalpy, the entropy, and the Gibbs energy) of the hybrid dendrimer were calculated over the range from T = 0 to 600 K using the experimentally determined heat capacity. The standard entropy of formation of the investigated dendrimer was evaluated at T = 298.15 K. The obtained thermodynamic properties of the studied hybrid dendrimer were compared and discussed with the literature data for some of the first-generation organosilicon and pyridylphenylene dendrimers
Controllable Synthesis of Hybrid Dendrimers Composed of a Carbosilane Core and an Aromatic Shell: Does Size Matter?
The controllable synthesis of novel hybrid dendrimers composed of flexible and rigid components was accomplished via effective Cu-catalyzed azide–alkyne cycloaddition (“click”) reaction between azide-functionalized carbosilane cores of two generations and monoethynyl-substituted hexaphenylbenzene dendron. A comprehensive analysis of the thermal and phase behavior of dendrimers allows us to detect a similar performance of dendrimers of both generations which, in our opinion, can be due to the similar ratio of rigid and flexible blocks in the dendrimers regardless the generation of carbosilane cores. The propensity to crystallization and ordering after the annealing procedure was confirmed by DSC and SWAXS. We found that hybrid dendrimers have a tendency to order depending on their constituents of different structures. This is in contrast to homogeneous dendrimers whose propensity to order is determined by the dendrimer molecule as a whole
Hybrid Polycarbosilane-Siloxane Dendrimers: Synthesis and Properties
A series of carbosilane dendrimers of the 4th, 6th, and 7th generations with a terminal trimethylsilylsiloxane layer was synthesized. Theoretical models of these dendrimers were developed, and equilibrium dendrimer conformations obtained via molecular dynamics simulations were in a good agreement with experimental small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) data demonstrating molecule monodispersity and an almost spherical shape. It was confirmed that the glass transition temperature is independent of the dendrimer generation, but is greatly affected by the chemical nature of the dendrimer terminal groups. A sharp increase in the zero-shear viscosity of dendrimer melts was found between the 5th and the 7th dendrimer generations, which was qualitatively identical to that previously reported for polycarbosilane dendrimers with butyl terminal groups. The viscoelastic properties of high-generation dendrimers seem to follow some general trends with an increase in the generation number, which are determined by the regular branching structure of dendrimers
Environment Friendly Process toward Functional Polyorganosiloxanes with Different Chemical Structures through CuAAC Reaction
Despite the presence of many methods, which were created
to date
for the preparation, functionalization, and vulcanization of polysiloxanes,
the development of materials based on silicones remains relevant and
requires the introduction of new approaches that combine such modern
strategies as atom-economical reactions, refusal to use harmful and
dangerous organochlorosilanes, and using the principles of green chemistry
and minimizing the use of solvents. In this work, we develop modern
approaches to the preparation of both linear and branched polyorganosiloxanes
containing azidopropyl functions at the silicon atom. In the first
part of the work, it was shown that the proposed method for introducing
these groups by catalytic rearrangement with the opening of cyclosiloxane
is effective and makes it possible to obtain polysiloxanes with different
contents of azidopropyl groups and different molecular weights. The
second part of the work demonstrated the possibility of postpolymerization
functionalization of such polymers by the mechanism of azide–alkyne
cycloaddition under “green” conditions, without using
solvents and amines. All of the most important functional fragments
were introduced into the structures of organosilicon polymers by a
single mechanism, under simple conditions, without the use of expensive
catalysts, exposure to irradiation, and hazardous solvents. The combination
of simplicity and versatility in the preparation of polysiloxanes
with azidopropyl groups with the possibility of performing a click
reaction makes it possible to directionally obtain the required materials
based on universal raw materials and, as a result, can open up broad
prospects for serious development and rethinking of the chemistry
of silicones