Sequence-Controlled
Polymer Synthesis Derived from
Alcohols, Cyclic Enol Ethers, and Vinyl Ethers: Selective Generation
of 2‑Alkoxy Cyclic Ethers Followed by Living Cationic Alternating
Copolymerization by the One-Pot Process
Syntheses
of sequence-controlled copolymers with controllable molecular
weights and chain ends composed of alcohols, cyclic enol ethers, and
vinyl ethers (VEs) were demonstrated using an approach consisting
of selective monomer generation and subsequent alternating copolymerization.
Acid-catalyzed additions of alcohols to 2,3-dihydrofuran or 3,4-dihydro-2H-pyran proceeded quantitatively to yield 2-alkoxy cyclic
ethers (2-ACEs). Subsequent cationic alternating copolymerization
of the 2-ACE and a VE proceeded successfully via concurrent ring-opening
and vinyl-addition mechanisms, yielding copolymers with periodically
arranged alcohol-derived side chain-containing cyclic enol ether and
VE moieties in the repeating units. Complete degradation of the obtained
copolymers into a single compound by alcoholysis confirmed the alternating
sequences. The use of 2-propanol, (−)-menthol, and (1R)-endo-(+)-fenchyl alcohol was effective
for the syntheses of well-defined polymers, whereas the use of methanol
resulted in oligomers. The bulkiness of the alkoxy groups of the 2-ACEs
likely contributed to the preference for propagation rather than chain
transfer