Seoul National Univ. DMSE
Notice

Seminar & Colloquium

Seminar & Colloquium
[세미나: 7월 24일(월), 오전 11시] ETH, Zurich, Prof. Tae-Lim Choi

[세미나: 7월 24일(월), 오전 11시] ETH, Zurich, Prof. Tae-Lim Choi

 

 

Title

Applying New Synthetic Methodologies to Versatile Polymerizations and Self-Assembly Process

 

 

Speaker

Prof. Tae-Lim Choi, Department of Materials, ETH, Zurich

 

 

Education

- 1999  B.S., Chemistry, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology 

- 2003  Ph.D., Chemistry, California Institute of Technology 

 

 

Major Activities

- 2003 - 2004 Post Doctoral Research Fellow, University of California, Berkeley

- 2004 - 2008   Principal Researcher, Samsung Cheil Industries Inc. Electronic Chemical Materials Division (Current name Samsung SDI)

- 2008 - 2012 Assistance Professor, Dept. of Chem., Seoul National University

- 2012 - 2017 Associate Professor, Dept. of Chem., Seoul National University

- 2017 - 2022 Full Professor, Dept. of Chem., Seoul National University

- 2017 - 2023 Director, Creative Research Center for Synthesis of Complex Macromolecules

- 2013 - 2022 Editor of Journal of Polymer Science, Wiley

- 2022 - Present Full Professor of Polymer Chemistry, Dept. of Materials, ETH, Zürich

 

 

| Date | Monday, July 24th, 2023

| Time | 11:00 ~ 

| Venue | 33동 228호 (해동오디토리움) 

 

 

[Abstract]

Olefin metathesis provides a versatile synthetic method to produce small, medium and large molecules. Over the past two decades, wide ranges of the molecules have been prepared by various types of olefin metathesis from various alkenes. Ru-based Grubbs catalysts have popularized the reaction because the catalysts are not just highly active but also very easy to handle with good functional group tolerance. Now the metathesis polymerization of alkene monomers is one of the most common ways to construct polymer architectures and nanostructures. On the other hand, only a few study reported the polymerization of alkyne-containing molecules although alkynes are highly versatile functional groups in synthetic chemistry. Here, we describe two new polymerisation strategies using alkynes

Firstly, we studied the cyclopolymerization of 1,6-heptadiyne derivatives using Grubbs catalysts to produce soluble and processable polyacetylenes. We will discuss about a story of how we achieved living cyclopolymerization to control molecular weight and narrow dispersity. Secondly, we recently developed a novel method for preparing fully conjugated polyenynes by combining olefin metathesis and metallotropic 1,3-shift reactions (M&M polymerization). This method allowed for very unique specific-sequence of cascade reaction by using Grubbs catalyst. Rational design of monomers enabled living polymerization of various multi-alkynes.

With these polymerizations in hand, we extended our studies to prepare novel nanostructures. We will demonstrate that cyclopolymerization and M&M polymerization gave conjugated polymers that readily undergoes self-assembly to semiconducting 1D and 2D nanoparticles. We were able to obtain AFM and TEM images and also conducted some diffraction studies to elucidate the tentative packing model for these unique nanostructures. We will describe the story of how we were able to control the shape or the sizes of these nanostructures. 

 

 

| Host | 권민상 교수(02-880-8326)