Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Robert M. Waymouth is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Robert M. Waymouth.


Science | 1995

Oscillating Stereocontrol: A Strategy for the Synthesis of Thermoplastic Elastomeric Polypropylene

Geoffrey W. Coates; Robert M. Waymouth

A strategy has been developed for the synthesis of thermoplastic elastomeric polypropylene based on the catalytic activity of the unbridged metallocene bis(2-phenylindenyl)zirconium dichloride [(2-PhInd)2ZrCl2]. This catalyst was designed to isomerize between achiral and chiral coordination geometries during the polymerization reaction to produce atactic-isotactic stereoblock polymers. The metallocene precursor (2-PhInd)2ZrCl2 in the presence of methylaluminoxane polymerizes propylene to yield rubbery polypropylene. The isotacticity of the polymer, described by the isotactic pentad content, increases with increasing propylene pressure and decreasing polymerization temperature to produce polypropylenes with an isotactic pentad content ranging from 6.3 to 28.1 percent.


Chemical Communications | 2008

Tagging alcohols with cyclic carbonate: a versatile equivalent of (meth)acrylate for ring-opening polymerization

Russell C. Pratt; Robert M. Waymouth; James L. Hedrick

Cyclic carbonate monomers based on a single biocompatible scaffold allow for incorporation of a wide range of functional groups into macromolecules via ring-opening polymerization.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

The Reaction Mechanism for the Organocatalytic Ring-Opening Polymerization of l-Lactide Using a Guanidine-Based Catalyst: Hydrogen-Bonded or Covalently Bound?

Anthony Chuma; Hans W. Horn; William C. Swope; Russell C. Pratt; Lei Zhang; Bas G. G. Lohmeijer; Charles G. Wade; Robert M. Waymouth; James L. Hedrick; Julia E. Rice

We have investigated two alternative mechanisms for the ring-opening polymerization of l-lactide using a guanidine-based catalyst, the first involving acetyl transfer to the catalyst, and the second involving only hydrogen bonding to the catalyst. Using computational chemistry methods, we show that the hydrogen bonding pathway is considerably preferred over the acetyl transfer pathway and that this is consistent with experimental information.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Zwitterionic Polymerization: A Kinetic Strategy for the Controlled Synthesis of Cyclic Polylactide

Wonhee Jeong; Eun Ji Shin; Darcy A. Culkin; James L. Hedrick; Robert M. Waymouth

The zwitterionic ring-opening polymerization of lactide initiated by N-heterocyclic carbenes generates cyclic polylactides with well-defined molecular weights between M(n) = 5000 and 30,000 g/mol with narrow polydispersities (M(w)/M(n) < or = 1.31). These zwitterionic polymerizations are extremely rapid (k(p) = 48.7 M(-1) s(-1)), but also exhibit exceptional control of molecular weight and molecular weight distribution. The unusual kinetic features of these zwitterionic polymerizations are illuminated with kinetic and mechanistic investigations, which implicate a mechanism that involves a slow initiation step (second order in [M]), a propagation step (first order in [M]) that is much faster than initiation (k(i) = 0.274 M(-2) s(-1)), cyclization (k(c) = 0.0575 s(-1)), and depropagation (k(d) = 0.208 s(-1)). Numerical and stochastic simulations of the kinetic data provide a kinetic rationale for the evolution of molecular weight with monomer conversion: the molecular weights increase with increasing monomer conversion, exhibit a nonzero intercept near 0% monomer conversion, and are relatively insensitive to the initial monomer-to-initiator ratio. The observed narrow molecular weight distributions are due to a high rate of propagation relative to cyclization and chain transfer. Kinetic simulations define the kinetic criteria under which the active zwitterions remain in solution; these simulations were substantiated by chain-extension experiments, which provide experimental evidence for chain extension of the zwitterions and reinitiation by the N-heterocyclic carbenes liberated upon macrocyclization. The kinetic model rationalizes some of the unique features of zwitterionic ring-opening polymerization and provides a useful mechanistic framework to optimize these polymerizations as a strategy to generate well-defined cyclic polyesters.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2013

Zwitterionic Ring-Opening Polymerization for the Synthesis of High Molecular Weight Cyclic Polymers

Hayley A. Brown; Robert M. Waymouth

Cyclic polymers are an intriguing class of macromolecules. Because of the constraints of the cyclic topology and the absence of chain ends, the properties of these molecules differ from those of linear polymers in ways that remain poorly understood. Cyclic polymers present formidable synthetic challenges because the entropic penalty of coupling the chain ends grows exponentially with increasing molecular weight. In this Account, we describe recent progress in the application of zwitterionic ring-opening polymerization (ZROP) as a strategy for the synthesis of high molecular weight, cyclic polymers. Zwitterionic ring-opening polymerization involves the addition of neutral organic nucleophiles to strained heterocyclic monomers; under appropriate conditions, cyclization of the resultant macrozwitterions generates cyclic macromolecules. We discuss the mechanistic and kinetic features of these zwitterionic ring-opening reactions and the conditions that influence the efficiency of the initiation, propagation, and cyclization to generate high molecular weight cyclic polymers. N-Heterocyclic carbenes (NHC) are potent nucleophiles and relatively poor leaving groups, two features that are important for the generation of high molecular weight polymers. Investigations of the nature of the monomer and nucleophile have helped researchers understand the factors that govern the reactivity of these systems and their impact on the molecular weight and molecular weight distributions of the resulting cyclic polymers. We focus primarily on ZROP mediated by N-heterocyclic carbene nucleophiles but also discuss zwitterionic polymerizations with amidine, pyridine, and imidazole nucleophiles. The ZROP of N-carboxyanhydrides with N-hetereocyclic carbenes generates a family of functionalized cyclic polypeptoids. We can synthesize gradient lactone copolymers by exploiting differences in relative reactivity present in ZROP that differ from those of traditional metal-mediated polymerizations. These new synthetic methods have allowed us to investigate the influence of topology on the crystallization behavior, stereocomplexation, and solution properties of cyclic macromolecules.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2009

Cyclic guanidine organic catalysts: what is magic about triazabicyclodecene?

Matthew K. Kiesewetter; Marc D. Scholten; Nicole Kirn; Ryan L. Weber; James L. Hedrick; Robert M. Waymouth

The bicyclic guanidine 1,5,7- triazabicyclo[4.4.0]dec-5-ene (TBD) is an effective organocatalyst for the formation of amides from esters and primary amines. Mechanistic and kinetic investigations support a nucleophilic mechanism where TBD reacts reversibly with esters to generate an acyl-TBD intermediate that acylates amines to generate the amides. Comparative investigations of the analogous bicyclic guanidine 1,4,6-triazabicyclo[3.3.0]oct-4-ene (TBO) reveal it to be a much less active acylation catalyst than TBD. Theoretical and mechanistic studies imply that the higher reactivity of TBD is a consequence of both its higher basicity and nucleophilicity than TBO as well as the high reactivity of the acyl-TBD intermediate, which is sterically prevented from adopting a planar amide structure.


Biomacromolecules | 2009

Simple Approach to Stabilized Micelles Employing Miktoarm Terpolymers and Stereocomplexes with Application in Paclitaxel Delivery

Eric A. Appel; Jeremy P. K. Tan; Sung Ho Kim; Kazuki Fukushima; Joseph Sly; Robert D. Miller; Robert M. Waymouth; Yi Yan Yang; James L. Hedrick

A simple and versatile approach to miktoarm co- and terpolymers from carbonate functional oligomers is described. The key building block employed is a carboxylic acid functional cyclic carbonate, derived from 2,2-bis(methylol)propionic acid, that was readily coupled to a hydroxyl functional monomethylether poly(ethylene glycol) oligomer. Ring-opening of the cyclic carbonate using functional amines generates a carbamate linkage bearing a functional group capable of initiating either controlled radical or ring-opening polymerization, together with a primary hydroxyl group for ring-opening polymerization. Two tandem polymerization steps were possible which add the second two arms, thus generating the targeted ABC miktoarm terpolymer. The resulting amphiphilic miktoarm terpolymers containing poly(D- and L-lactide) formed polylactide stereocomplexes in the bulk. In aqueous solution, the stereocomplex mixture of Y-shaped miktoarm copolymers, poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(D-lactide)-poly(D-lactide) and poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(L-lactide)-poly(L-lactide), or the stereoblock miktoarm poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(D-lactide)-poly(L-lactide) form stabilized micelles with a significantly lower critical micelle concentration than those derived from conventional stereo regular linear or Y-shaped amphiphiles. This simple and versatile approach provides a useful synthetic route to complex macromolecular architectures that can assemble into stable micelles. These micelles provide high capacity for loading of the anticancer drug paclitaxel and possess narrow size distribution as well as unique structure, leading to sustained and near zero-ordered release of drug without significant initial burst.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Oligocarbonate Molecular Transporters: Oligomerization Based Syntheses and Cell Penetrating Studies

Christina B. Cooley; Brian M. Trantow; Matthew K. Kiesewetter; James L. Hedrick; Robert M. Waymouth; Paul A. Wender

A new family of guanidinium-rich molecular transporters featuring a novel oligocarbonate backbone with 1,7-side chain spacing is described. Conjugates can be rapidly assembled irrespective of length in a one-step oligomerization strategy that can proceed with concomitant introduction of probes (or by analogy drugs). The new transporters exhibit excellent cellular entry as determined by flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy, and the functionality of their drug delivery capabilities was confirmed by the delivery of the bioluminescent small molecule probe luciferin and turnover by its intracellular target enzyme.


Angewandte Chemie | 2010

Selective Catalytic Oxidation of Glycerol to Dihydroxyacetone

Ron M. Painter; David Pearson; Robert M. Waymouth

The increasing global demand for biodiesel has spawned an increase in the supply of glycerol. Glycerol is an attractive and versatile feedstock as it is nontoxic, edible, and biodegradable, and it can be used as a building block for valueadded chemicals. 2] The development of novel, selective chemistry to provide new applications for glycerol-derived products remains a key challenge. Herein, we report the chemoselective, catalytic transformation of glycerol into dihydroxyacetone (Scheme 1). Dihydroxyacetone is produced on an industrial scale by the


Biomacromolecules | 2008

Organocatalytic Approach to Amphiphilic Comb-Block Copolymers Capable of Stereocomplexation and Self-Assembly

Kazuki Fukushima; Russell C. Pratt; Jeremy P. K. Tan; Yi Yan Yang; Robert M. Waymouth; James L. Hedrick

Biocompatible amphiphilic block copolymers comprised of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) as the hydrophilic component and a poly(methylcarboxytrimethylene carbonate) (PMTC) as a hydrophobic backbone having either poly(L-lactide) (L-PLA) or poly(D-lactide) (D-PLA) branches were prepared by organocatalytic ring-opening polymerization (ROP). The polycarbonate backbone was prepared by copolymerization of two different MTC-type monomers (MTCs) including a tetrahydropyranyloxy protected hydroxyl group, a masked initiator for a subsequent ROP step. Interestingly, the organic catalyst used in the ROP of MTCs was also effective for acetylation of the hydroxyl end-groups by the addition of acetic anhydride added after polymerization. Acidic deprotection of the tetrahydropyranyloxy (THP) protecting group on the carbonate chain generated hydroxyl functional groups that served as initiators for the ROP of either D- or L-lactide. Comb-shaped block copolymers of predictable molecular weights and narrow polydispersities (approximately 1.3) were prepared with up to 8-PLA branches. Mixtures of the D- and L-lactide based copolymers were studied to understand the effect of noncovalent interactions or stereocomplexation on the properties.

Collaboration


Dive into the Robert M. Waymouth's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bas G. G. Lohmeijer

Eindhoven University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge