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Styrene/carbon monoxide

Styrene and ring-substituted styrenes also form copolymers with carbon monoxide, similarly to ethylene and a-olefins. These styrene/carbon monoxide copolymers are of alternating, highly regioregular head-to-tail structure and are characterised by different stereoregularity (syndiotactic, isotactic) [115-117]. [Pg.263]

Stereoisomerism of Alternating Styrene/Carbon Monoxide Copolymers... [Pg.266]

Scheme 8.15 Model for enantioface selection during styrene-carbon monoxide copolymerization using diphenylphosphine- (76) or pyridine-dihydrooxazole (77,77, 78) chelate ligands and for inversion of regiochemistry of the insertion (79, 79 ) for sterically hindered diarylphosphine-dihydrooxazole ligands (GPC = growing polymer chain). Scheme 8.15 Model for enantioface selection during styrene-carbon monoxide copolymerization using diphenylphosphine- (76) or pyridine-dihydrooxazole (77,77, 78) chelate ligands and for inversion of regiochemistry of the insertion (79, 79 ) for sterically hindered diarylphosphine-dihydrooxazole ligands (GPC = growing polymer chain).
Aeby, A. Gsponer, A. Consiglio, G From regiospecific to regioirregular alternating styrene/carbon monoxide copolymerization. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1998,120, 11000-11001. [Pg.591]

Mimura and Saito 709 discussed the advantages of using CO2 instead of steam for the DH of ethylbenzene to styrene on the basis of thermodynamic considerations. They considered both a one-step pathway, where CO2 plays a direct role in the oxide hydrogenation producing styrene, carbon monoxide, and water, and a two-step... [Pg.908]

Kiji and co-workers [87] investigated the composition and microstructure of alternating olefin-carbon monoxide copolymers and their derivatives including ethylene-styrene-carbon monoxide alternating polymer, norbornene-amine copolymer and polymers modified with phosphorus pentasulfide or phosphorus pentoxide or primary amines. [Pg.116]

Other patents include copolymers of vinyl ketones with acrylates, methacrylates, and styrene (53) an ethylene—carbon monoxide (1—7 wt %) blend... [Pg.476]

It has been discovered that styrene forms a linear alternating copolymer with carbon monoxide using palladium II—phenanthroline complexes. The polymers are syndiotactic and have a crystalline melting point - 280° C (59). Shell Oil Company is commercializing carbon monoxide a-olefin plastics based on this technology (60). [Pg.507]

The oxidative carbonylation of styrene with carbon monoxide, oxygen, and an aUphatic alcohol in the presence of a palladium salt, a copper salt, and sodium propionate also provides the requisite cinnamate. [Pg.174]

Photodegradation may involve use of inherently photo-unstable polymers or the use of photodegradant additives. An example of the former are ethylene-carbon monoxide polymers in which absorption of light by the ketone group leads to chain scission. The polymer becomes brittle and forms a powder. Such materials are marketed by Dow and by Du Pont. Other examples are the copolymers of divinyl ketone with ethylene, propylene or styrene marketed by Eco Atlantic. [Pg.881]

When dicobalt octacarbonyl, [Co(CO)4]2, is the catalyst, the species that actually adds to the double bond is tricarbonylhydrocobalt, HCo(CO)3. Carbonylation, RCo(CO)3- -CO—>RCo(CO)4, takes place, followed by a rearrangement and a reduction of the C—Co bond, similar to steps 4 and 5 of the nickel carbonyl mechanism shown in 15-30. The reducing agent in the reduction step is tetra-carbonylhydrocobalt HCo(CO)4, ° or, under some conditions, H2. When HCo(CO)4 was the agent used to hydroformylate styrene, the observation of CIDNP indicated that the mechanism is different, and involves free radicals. Alcohols can be obtained by allowing the reduction to continue after all the carbon monoxide is... [Pg.1037]

It has been shown by Barb and by Dainton and Ivin that a 1 1 complex formed from the unsaturated monomer (n-butene or styrene) and sulfur dioxide, and not the latter alone, figures as the comonomer reactant in vinyl monomer-sulfur dioxide polymerizations. Thus the copolymer composition may be interpreted by assuming that this complex copolymerizes with the olefin, or unsaturated monomer. The copolymerization of ethylene and carbon monoxide may similarly involve a 1 1 complex (Barb, 1953). [Pg.183]

Selective transformations Selective styrene ring opening [103] One-pot domino process for regioselective synthesis of a-carbonyl furans [104] Tandem process for synthesis of quinoxalines [105] Atmospheric oxidation of toluene [106] Cyclohexane oxidation [107] Synthesis of imines from alcohols [108] Synthesis of 2-aminodiphenylamine [109] 9H-Fluorene oxidation [110] Dehydrogenation of ethane in the presence of C02 [111] Decomposition of methane [112] Carbon monoxide oxidation [113]... [Pg.228]

Alternating copolymers of ethylene with olefins containing double bonds in the cis configuration, like ds-2-butene, cyclopentene, cycloheptene,115 and norbomene,116 have been described. Recently also copolymers of carbon monoxide with styrene and styrene derivatives, having syndiotactic117 and isotactic118 configurations, have been synthesized and characterized. [Pg.105]

Two molecules of carbon monoxide were successively incorporated into an epoxide in the presence of a cobalt catalyst and a phase transfer agent [29]. When styrene oxide was treated with carbon monoxide (0.1 MPa), excess methyl iodide, NaOH (0.50 M), and catalytic amounts of Co2(CO)8 and hexadecyltrimethylammonium bromide in benzene, 3-hydroxy-4-phenyl-2(5H)-furanone was produced in 65% yield (Scheme 7). A possible reaction mechanism was proposed as shown in Scheme 8 Addition of an in situ... [Pg.233]

A high carbon monoxide pressure ( 5 atmos.) favours the formation of the butane. Possible mechanisms for its formation include homolytic cleavage of the benzyl-cobalt tetracarbonyl complex and recombination of the radicals to generate 2,3-diphenylbutane and dicobalt octacarbonyl, or a base-catalysed decomposition of the benzylcobalt tetracarbonyl complex (Scheme 8.4). The ethylbenzene and styrene could arise from the phenylethyl radical, or from the n-styrene hydridocobalt tricarbonyl complex. [Pg.371]


See other pages where Styrene/carbon monoxide is mentioned: [Pg.107]    [Pg.266]    [Pg.267]    [Pg.96]    [Pg.390]    [Pg.373]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.435]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.266]    [Pg.267]    [Pg.96]    [Pg.390]    [Pg.373]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.435]    [Pg.453]    [Pg.190]    [Pg.33]    [Pg.713]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.183]    [Pg.183]    [Pg.184]    [Pg.184]    [Pg.189]    [Pg.43]    [Pg.52]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.92]    [Pg.263]   


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Carbon Monoxide and Styrene

Olefins and styrene co carbon monoxide polymers

Styrene/carbon monoxide copolymers

Terpolymers of olefins, styrene and carbon monoxide

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