Abstract

An efficient procedure for the oxidation of 1,1-diadamantylamine with m-chloroperbenzoic acid (m-CPBA) to the corresponding sterically hindered nitroxide in high yield (72%) is reported. The corresponding styrene-based alkoxyamine was synthesized by an atom transfer radical addition (ATRA) reaction. Because of the bulkiness of the adamantyl substituents, the cleavage of the C−ON bond of the alkoxyamine occurred readily at temperatures below 100 °C. However, in spite of the low bond dissociation temperature of the alkoxyamine, the (co)polymerizations of styrene and n-butyl acrylate proceeded poorly. The results in this paper support the argument that the most important determinant in a nitroxide-mediated polymerization of styrene and acrylate is the ability to control the excess concentration of nitroxide in solution either by an inherent instability of the nitroxide or by the use of additives that destroy the excess nitroxide. Thus, for the 1,1-diadamantyl nitroxide case, and maybe more generally, while a lower C−O bond dissociation energy of an alkoxyamine moiety at the end of the chain may allow lower polymerization temperatures and faster reactions rates, it does not enable polymerizations to proceed to high conversions if the excess nitroxide is not controlled in some manner.

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