Propylene oxide, PO, reacts when heated to 60 °C over a zinc glutarate catalyst to form
poly(propylene oxide), PPO, which is regioregular, HTHTHT, and favors isotactic triads ii. Under 50 bar
of CO2, poly(propylene carbonate), PPC, is formed with less than 5% polyether linkages and with an
even smaller component of propylene carbonate, PC. These reactions have been studied as a function of
time, and the products have been analyzed by GPC, MALDI−TOF/MS, and 13C {H} NMR spectroscopy.
Polymerization of PO yields PPO with −OH and −H end groups, and in the copolymerization of PO and
CO2 the low molecular weight chains are readily identified as an alternating copolymer represented as
(PO)
n
-alt-(CO2)
m
, where m = n − 1, n − 2, n − 3, n − 4, n − 5, with terminal −OH and −H groups. These
results, combined with NMR data, implicate Zn−OH groups as the active initiating species, and
furthermore from the molecular weight of the polymer produced at short reaction times, we can infer
that some Zn−OH sites are highly active in producing long-chain polymers. The 13C {1H} NMR spectra
of PPC formed from rac-PO, 50:50 S-PO + rac-PO, and S-PO reveal the preferential formation of HT
junctions in the ring-opening of PO by the alkyl carbonate with a HH:HT:TT ratio of 1:3:1. Certain
assignments at the diad, triad, and tetrad levels are offered.