Role of Lewis Acids in preventing the degradation of dithioester-dormant species in the RAFT polymerization of acrylamides in methanol to enable the successful dual control of molecular weight and tacticity†‡
Abstract
Reversible addition–fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization of acrylamide in methanol using dithioester RAFT chain-transfer agent 2a was unsuccessful due to degradation of the end group. However, this degradation was completely suppressed by the addition of rare-earth metal triflates (RMTs). As RMTs are effective for the stereoselective polymerization of acrylamides, RAFT polymerization in the presence of RMTs afforded the corresponding poly(acrylamide)s with controlled molecular weight and tacticity. The conditions allowed the synthesis of high-molecular-weight polyacrylamides with molecular weights up to 168 000, low dispersity (<1.5) and high tacticity (90% meso diad selectivity). The degradation mechanism initiated by nucleophilic attack of acrylamide on the dithioester group was experimentally clarified for the first time. As RMT is a Lewis acid, its coordination to the amide group of acrylamide reduces its nucleophilicity.