Although the difference in hydrogen bonding between thioamide and amide groups has been widely discussed, their mechanical comparison remains unexplored. We report a postpolymerization modification strategy involving main-chain atom insertion to prepare polyethylenes bearing in-chain thioamide groups (polyethylene-thioamides) and their amide analogs (polyethylene-amides) with identical molecular weights and incorporation ratios, enabling mechanical evaluation of the difference in hydrogen bonding. Starting from polyethylenes bearing in-chain carbonyl groups (polyethylene-ketones), oxime formation followed by a (diethylamino)sulfur trifluoride (DAST) promoted rearrangement enabled nitrogen atom insertion into the polymer main-chain, and subsequent one-pot nucleophilic substitution with sodium hydrogen sulfide (NaSH) afforded polyethylene-thioamides. Mechanical testing revealed that polyethylene-thioamide containing 0.8 mol % thioamide groups exhibited a tensile strength of 21.3 MPa, significantly lower than that of polyethylene-amide (41.9 MPa, 0.7 mol % amide). These results provide direct experimental insight into the weaker hydrogen bonding of thioamides compared with that of amides, representing the first macroscopic mechanical comparison between the two.
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Yipu Lu
Kohei Takahashi
Nontarin Roopsung
Macromolecules
The University of Tokyo
Hokkaido University
RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science
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Lu et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b606ea83145bc643d1d75c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.macromol.5c03179
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