In this work, the polymerization of Limonene Oxide (LO) has been achieved using an Earth abundant metal-based catalyst developed in our group, that is very active in ring opening polymerization (ROP) processes. The bio-based polylimonene ether (PLO) obtained had low molecular weight and good thermal properties, thus being a potential green polymeric additive for other bio-based polymers such as PLA. Hence, we have explored its ability to influence PLA properties. The addition of only 10 wt %, led to the modification and improvement of PLA properties in terms of flexibility, thermal stability, and hydrophobicity. The results obtained are promising and open up the potential industrial application of polylimonene oxide (PLO) for the melt-processing of blends based on PLA/PLO. These new materials are totally based on renewable sources and may be interesting for many applications where biodegradability and reduced water adsorption is required, such as food packaging or agricultural mulch films.
This work reports on the use of gallium aminotrisphenolate compounds as catalysts for the synthesis of cyclic carbonates from epoxides and CO2. The results show that they are highly active, and more so than the corresponding aluminium congeners. The catalyst system is applicable at low and elevated temperatures across a wide substrate scope including terminal, internal, multiple and fully deuterated epoxides. Applying low catalyst loadings has allowed for a TON of 344,000 to be obtained, highlighting their stability. A DFT investigation has confirmed that the gallium catalysts have lower energetic profiles compared to the aluminium congeners. Measurement of the Lewis acidity of both the gallium and aluminium aminotrisphenolate compounds using the Gutmann‐Beckett method provides the experimental proof that the gallium compounds are more Lewis acidic than their aluminium congeners. Finally, Ab‐Initio Molecular Dynamic (AIMD) simulations have investigated and quantified the dynamic behaviour of the catalytic systems, highlighting an important increase in fluxionality in some cases which helps to explain the increase in catalytic activity.
Two non-toxic potassium compounds, 1 and 2, with a commercial oximate ligand have been prepared and fully spectroscopically characterized. Their activity as catalysts for the ring-opening polymerization (ROP) process of LLA has been studied, showing that they are extremely active and able to polymerize the monomer in a few minutes. For derivative 2, the presence of a crown ether in the potassium coordination sphere affects the nuclearity of the compound and consequently its solubility, with both aspects having an influence in the polymerization process. Detailed studies of the polymerization mechanism have been performed, and an unusual anionic mechanism was observed in absence of a co-initiator. Indeed, the monomer deprotonation generates a lactide enolate, which initiates the polymerization propagation. On the contrary, when a 1:1 ratio of cat:BnOH is used, a mixture of mechanisms is observed, the anionic mechanism and the activated monomer one, while from a cat:BnOH ratio of 1:2 and over, only the activated monomer mechanism is observed.
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