posted on 2025-03-25, 18:06authored byRyan B. Baumgartner, Travis L. Sunderland
Hydrosilylation is one of the most ubiquitous reactions
in silicone
chemistry, used to make and cure a variety of products that consumers
interact with on a daily basis. A longstanding complication with this
reaction is the propensity of platinum catalysts to isomerize terminal
alkenes to internal alkenes that are far less reactive toward hydrosilylation.
Here, we demonstrate that with the appropriate choice of Si–H
substrate and control over the reaction conditions, these internal
isomers can be reisomerized to the terminal alkene to then undergo
hydrosilylation with Karstedt’s catalyst, an industry standard
platinum catalyst. This ultimately leads to hydrosilylation products
with no residual isomer content, on time scales relevant for industrial
production. Only -SiMe2H (M′) substrates were capable
of producing isomer free products, with -SiMeH- (D′) units
as substrates resulting in high (>13 mol %) residual isomerized
alkenes.
Using this technology, low-isomer silicone polyether materials were
synthesized with a final isomer content <1 mol %. Due to the propensity
of residual isomerized species to undergo hydrolysis to propionaldehyde
and other malodorous acetals, this technology is expected to reduce
the odor of residual alkenyl species in silicone polyether materials
in a cost-effective manner for industrial production.