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  1. Abstract

    Nylon‐6 is selectively depolymerized to the parent monomer ϵ‐caprolactam by the readily accessible and commercially available lanthanide trisamido catalysts Ln(N(TMS)2)3(Ln=lanthanide). The depolymerization process is solvent‐free, near quantitative, highly selective, and operates at the lowest Nylon‐6 to ϵ‐caprolactam depolymerization temperature reported to date. The catalytic activity of the different lanthanide trisamides scales with the Ln3+ionic radius, and this process is effective with post‐consumer Nylon‐6 as well as with Nylon‐6+polyethylene, polypropylene or polyethylene terephthalate mixtures. Experimental kinetic data and theoretical (DFT) mechanistic analyses suggest initial deprotonation of a Nylon terminal amido N−H bond, which covalently binds the catalyst to the polymer, followed by a chain‐end back‐biting process in which ϵ‐caprolactam units are sequentially extruded from the chain end.

     
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  2. Abstract

    Nylon‐6 is selectively depolymerized to the parent monomer ϵ‐caprolactam by the readily accessible and commercially available lanthanide trisamido catalysts Ln(N(TMS)2)3(Ln=lanthanide). The depolymerization process is solvent‐free, near quantitative, highly selective, and operates at the lowest Nylon‐6 to ϵ‐caprolactam depolymerization temperature reported to date. The catalytic activity of the different lanthanide trisamides scales with the Ln3+ionic radius, and this process is effective with post‐consumer Nylon‐6 as well as with Nylon‐6+polyethylene, polypropylene or polyethylene terephthalate mixtures. Experimental kinetic data and theoretical (DFT) mechanistic analyses suggest initial deprotonation of a Nylon terminal amido N−H bond, which covalently binds the catalyst to the polymer, followed by a chain‐end back‐biting process in which ϵ‐caprolactam units are sequentially extruded from the chain end.

     
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  3. Organocatalyzed ring-opening polymerization (O-ROP) of a six-five bicyclic lactone, 4,5- trans -cyclohexyl-fused γ-butyrolactone (4,5-T6GBL), can be topologically selective or living at room temperature, depending on catalyst structure. A screening of (thio)urea [(T)U] and organic base pairs revealed unique trends in reactivity for this monomer as well as the most active catalyst pairs, which were employed as received commercially to produce relatively high molecular weight ( M n up to 106 kDa), low dispersity ( Đ = 1.04) linear poly(4,5-T6GBL) in a living fashion. The ROP using a hybrid organic/inorganic pair of TU/KOMe in neat conditions led to poly(4,5-T6GBL) with even higher molecular weight ( M n = 215 kDa, Đ = 1.04). In comparison to the metal-catalyzed system, (T)U-base pairs exhibited competitive kinetics and reached higher monomer conversions, and their reactions can be performed in air. In addition, the resulting polymers required less purification to produce materials with higher onset decomposition temperature. (T)U-base pairs were selective towards linear polymerization only, whereas triazabicyclodecene can catalyze both polymerization and (quantitative) depolymerization processes, depending on reaction conditions. Cyclic polymers with M n = 41–72 kDa were selectively formed via N-heterocyclic carbene-mediated zwitterionic O-ROP. 
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