Abstract

Abstract Chloral polymers prepared by anionic polymerization have alkoxide endgroups as terminal ends at the end of this polymerization. The initiating anion has, as expected, no influence on the type of terminal group formed. Polychloral with terminal alkoxide ends degrades easily thermally to monomeric chloral. Alkoxide endgroups in polychloral do not readily react with alkylating or acylating agents, although partial stabilization has been observed when alkoxide-terminated polymers were allowed to stand for periods of time; the endgroups seem to react either with impurities or with excess chloral in side reactions. With protic acids, alkoxide-terminated polychloral is transformed into hydroxyl-terminated polymer of higher thermal stability. Studies of the initiation step of the chloral polymerization revealed that above the ceiling temperature of polymerization, strong nucleophiles, such as soluble tertiary butoxide, initiate quantitatively, but polymerization does not proceed until the mixture is cool...

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