Understanding the Mechanism of Polymerization of ε-Caprolactone Catalyzed by Aluminum Salen Complexes
Miranda, M. O.; DePorre, Y.; Vazquez-Lima, H.; Johnson, M. A.; Marell, D.
J.; Cramer, C. J.; Tolman, W. B.
Inorg. Chem.
2013, 52, 13692
(doi:10.1021/ic402255m).
Studies of the kinetics of polymerization of ε-caprolactone (CL) by salen-aluminum catalysts comprising ligands with similar steric profiles but different electron donating characteristics (R = OMe, Br, or NO2) were performed using high initial monomer concentrations (2 M < [CL]0 < 2.6 M) in toluene-d8 at temperatures ranging from 20 oC to 90 oC. Saturation behavior was observed, enabling determination of monomer equilibrium constants (Keq) and catalytic rate constants (k2) as a function of R and temperature. While Keq varied only slightly with the electron donating properties of R (Hammett ρ = + 0.16(8)), k2 showed a more significant dependence reflected by ρ = +1.4(1). Thermodynamic parameters ΔGo (associated with Keq) and ΔG‡ (associated with k2) were determined, with the former being ~0 kcal/mol for all catalysts and the latter exhibiting the trend R = OMe > Br > NO2. DFT calculations were performed to characterize mechanistic pathways at a microscopic level of detail. Lowest energy transition-state structures feature incipient bonding of the nucleophile to the lactone carbonyl that is approaching the metal ion, but a distinct CL adduct is not an energy minimum on the reaction pathway, arguing against Keq being associated with coordination of monomer according to the typical coordination-insertion mechanism. An alternative hypothesis is presented associating Keq with "nonproductive" coordination of substrate in a manner that inhibits the polymerization reaction at high substrate concentrations.