4.8 Article

Cooperativity in the Aldol Condensation Using Bifunctional Mesoporous Silica-Poly(styrene) MCM-41 Organic/Inorganic Hybrid Catalysts

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 14, Issue 9, Pages 11235-11247

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c21738

Keywords

cooperative catalysis; heterogeneous organocatalysis; atom-transfer radical polymerization; thiol-ene coupling; polymer-pore interactions

Funding

  1. United States Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DEFG02-03ER15459]

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This study explores the efficacy of silica/organic hybrid catalysts in aldol condensation and finds that lower-molecular-weight copolymers are more active than other catalysts.
This work explores the efficacy of silica/organic hybrid catalysts, where the organic component is built from linear aminopolymers appended to the silica support within the support mesopores. Specifically, the role of molecular weight and polymer chain composition in amine-bearing atom transfer radical polymerization-synthesized poly(styrene-co-2-(4-vinylbenzyl)isoindoline-1,3-dione) copolymers is probed in the aldol condensation of 4-nitrobenzaldehyde and acetone. Controlled polymerization produces protected amine-containing poly(styrene) chains of controlled molecular weight and dispersity, and a grafting-to thiol-ene coupling approach followed by a phthalimide deprotection step are used to covalently tether and activate the polymer hybrid catalysts prior to the catalytic reactions. Site-normalized batch kinetics are used to assess the role of polymer molecular weight and chain composition in the cooperative catalysis. Lower-molecular-weight copolymers are demonstrated to be more active than catalysts built from only molecular organic components or from higher-molecular-weight chains. Molecular dynamics simulations are used to probe the role of polymer flexibility and morphology, whereby it is determined that higher-molecular-weight hybrid structures result in congested pores that inhibit active site cooperativity and the diffusivity of reagents, thus resulting in lower rates during the reaction.

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