Comparison of Polypentenamer and Polynorbornene Bottlebrushes in Dilute Solution

Courtney M. Leo, Jaehoon Jang, Ethan J. Corey, William J. Neary, Jared I. Bowman, Justin G. Kennemur

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Bottlebrush (BB) polymers were synthesized via grafting-from-atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) of styrene on polypentenamer and polynorbornene macroinitiators with matched grafting density (ng = 4) and backbone degrees of polymerization (122 ≥ Nbb ≥ 61) to produce a comparative study on their respective dilute solution properties as a function of increasing side chain degree of polymerization (116 ≥ Nsc ≥ 5). The grafting-from technique produced near quantitative grafting efficiency and narrow dispersity Nsc as evidenced by spectroscopic analysis and ring closing metathesis depolymerization of the polypentenamer BBs. The versatility of this synthetic approach permitted a comprehensive survey of power law expressions that arise from monitoring intrinsic viscosity, hydrodynamic radius, and radius of gyration as a function of increasing the molar mass of the BBs by increasing Nsc. These values were compared to a series of linear (nongrafted, Nsc = 0) macroinitiators in addition to linear grafts. This unique study allowed elucidation of the onset of bottlebrush behavior for two different types of bottlebrush backbones with identical grafting density but inherently different flexibility. In addition, grafting-from ATRP of methyl acrylate on a polypentenamer macroinitiator allowed the observation of the effects of graft chemistry in comparison to polystyrene. Differences in the observed scaling relationships in dilute solution as a function of each of these synthetic variants are discussed.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)235-246
Number of pages12
JournalACS Polymers Au
Volume4
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 12 2024
Externally publishedYes

Funding

This work was supported by a CAREER Award from the National Science Foundation DMR-1750852. We are grateful to Prof. Brent Sumerlin for offering his lab\u2019s assistance in gathering portions of the data reported. We thank Dr. Carlos Lo\u0301pez-Barro\u0301n for the helpful discussions. This research used resources provided by the NMR Facility (FSU075000NMR) at the FSU Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry.

Keywords

  • ATRP
  • ROMP
  • bottlebrush
  • dilute solution
  • grafting-from
  • viscosity

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