Controlling the monomer sequence
of synthetic polymers
is a grand
challenge in polymer science. Conventional sequence control has been
achieved in dispersed polymers by exploiting the kinetic tendencies
of monomers and their order of addition. While the sequence of blocks
in multiblock copolymers can be readily tuned using sequential addition
of monomers (SAM), control over the sequence distribution is eroded
as the targeted block size approaches a single monomer unit (i.e., Xn ∼ 1) due to the stochastic
nature of chain-growth reactions. Thus, unique monomers are needed
to ensure precise single additions. Herein, we investigate common
classes of cyclic olefin monomers for ring-opening metathesis polymerization
(ROMP) to identify monomers for single unit addition during sequential
monomer addition synthesis. Through careful analysis of polymerization
kinetics, we find that easily synthesized oxanorbornene imide monomers
are suitable for single-addition reactions. With the identified monomers,
we demonstrate the synthesis of multiblock copolymers containing up
to three precise functionalization sites and singly cross-linked four-armed
star copolymers. We envision that expanded kinetic analyses of monomer
reactivities in ROMP reactions will enable novel polymer synthesis
capabilities such as the autonomous synthesis of sequence-defined
polymers or one-shot multiblock copolymer syntheses