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Polymeric 3-center 4-electron bonding

The kinds of vinyl monomers which undergo anionic polymerization are those with electron-withdrawing substituents such as the nitrile, carboxyl, and phenyl groups. We represent the catalysts as AB in this discussion these are substances which break into a cation (A ) and an anion (B ) under the conditions of the reaction. In anionic polymerization it is the basic anion which adds across the double bond of the monomer to form the active center for polymerization ... [Pg.404]

In the process of radical polymerization a monomolecular short stop of the kinetic chain arises from the delocalization of the unpaired electron along the conjugated chain and from the competition of the developing polyconjugated system with the monomer for the delivery of rr-electrons to the nf-orbitals of a transition metal catalyst in the ionic coordination process. Such a deactivation of the active center may also be due to an interaction with the conjugated bonds of systems which have already been formed. [Pg.5]

Two possible reasons may be noted by which just the coordinatively insufficient ions of the low oxidation state are necessary to provide the catalytic activity in olefin polymerization. First, the formation of the transition metal-carbon bond in the case of one-component catalysts seems to be realized through the oxidative addition of olefin to the transition metal ion that should possess the ability for a concurrent increase of degree of oxidation and coordination number (177). Second, a strong enough interaction of the monomer with the propagation center resulting in monomer activation is possible by 7r-back-donation of electrons into the antibonding orbitals of olefin that may take place only with the participation of low-valency ions of the transition metal in the formation of intermediate 71-complexes. [Pg.203]

This review has shown that the analogy between P=C and C=C bonds can indeed be extended to polymer chemistry. Two of the most common uses for C=C bonds in polymer science have successfully been applied to P=C bonds. In particular, the addition polymerization of phosphaalkenes affords functional poly(methylenephosphine)s the first examples of macromolecules with alternating phosphorus and carbon atoms. The chemical functionality of the phosphine center may lead to applications in areas such as polymer-supported catalysis. In addition, the first n-conjugated phosphorus analogs of poly(p-phenylenevinylene) have been prepared. Comparison of the electronic properties of the polymers with molecular model compounds is consistent with some degree of n-conjugation in the polymer backbone. [Pg.124]

As a typical case, olefin-metal complexation is described first. Alkene complexes of d° transition metals or ions have no d-electron available for the 7i-back donation, and thus their metal-alkene bonding is too weak for them to be isolated and characterized. One exception is CpfYCH2CH2C(CH3)2CH=CH2 (1), in which an intramolecular bonding interaction between a terminal olefinic moiety and a metal center is observed. However, this complex is thermally unstable above — 50 °C [11]. The MO calculation proves the presence of the weak metal-alkene bonding during the propagation step of the olefin polymerization [12,13]. [Pg.6]

The structure of dimethylberyllium is similar to that of trimethylaluminum except for the fact that the beryllium compound forms chains, whereas the aluminum compound forms dimers. Dimethylberyllium has the structure shown in Figure 12.3. The bridges involve an orbital on the methyl groups overlapping an orbital (probably best regarded as sp3) on the beryllium atoms to give two-electron three-center bonds. Note, however, that the bond angle Be-C-Be is unusually small. Because beryllium is a Lewis acid, the polymeric [Be(CH3)2] is separated when a Lewis base is added and adducts form. For example, with phosphine the reaction is... [Pg.402]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.239 ]




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