Polymers (Apr 2023)

A Biodegradable, Polymer-Supported Oxygen Atom Transfer Reagent

  • Erin E. Ramey,
  • Elizabeth L. Whitman,
  • Cole E. Buller,
  • James R. Tucker,
  • Charles S. Jolly,
  • Kjersti G. Oberle,
  • Austin J. Becksvoort,
  • Mark Turlington,
  • Christopher R. Turlington

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/polym15092052
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 9
p. 2052

Abstract

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Biodegradable polymers are desirable to mitigate the environmental impact of plastic waste in the environment. Over the past several decades, the development of organocatalytic ring-opening polymerization (OROP) has made the synthesis of many new types of biodegradable polymers possible. In this research article, the first example of an oxygen atom transfer reagent pendant on a biodegradable polymer backbone is reported. The monomers for the polycarbonate backbone are sourced from the biodegradable 2,2-bis(hydroxymethyl) propionic acid molecule, and an iodoaryl group is installed pendant to the cyclic monomer for post-polymerization modification into an iodosylaryl oxygen atom transfer reagent. The key I-O bond is characterized by XPS spectroscopy, and a test reaction to triphenylphosphine demonstrates the ability of the polymer to engage in an oxygen atom transfer reaction with a substrate.

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