posted on 2016-04-25, 14:33authored byIan D. Robertson, Emmy L. Pruitt, Jeffrey S. Moore
Polydicyclopentadiene (PDCPD) is
a polymer of growing importance
in industrial applications. Frontal ring-opening metathesis polymerization
(FROMP) offers a means to rapidly cure PDCPD with minimal input energy
owing to a propagating reaction wave sustained by the exothermic polymerization.
Previous examples of FROMP have required the use of relatively high
concentrations of costly ruthenium catalyst, negating many of the
benefits of FROMP synthesis. In this contribution, we demonstrate
that by using the highly reactive exo-dicyclopentadiene isomer for
FROMP the concentration of catalyst is reduced over 3-fold, while
maintaining a high frontal velocity. Reducing the amount of ruthenium
required for FROMP makes this technique attractive for the production
of large PDCPD structural components.