Gram-scale selective telomerization of isoprene and CO toward 100% renewable materials.

Nat Commun

Department of Chemistry and Biotechnology, Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, 113-8656, Japan.

Published: August 2025


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Article Abstract

Carbon dioxide (CO) is an ideal chemical feedstock due to its abundance, low cost, low toxicity and its role as a greenhouse gas. Telomerization with butadiene give rise to functional small molecules and polymers with significant CO content, but the fossil origin of the olefin offsets sustainability benefits. Here, we present a palladium-catalyzed telomerization of CO with isoprene, two of the most prevalent organic compounds in the atmosphere, yielding "COOIL", an ideally 100% renewable δ-lactone containing 24 wt% CO, with high selectivity and turnover numbers above 100. A combination of a Pd catalyst, acetate, and controlled water promoted selectivity and conversion. Density functional theory calculations reveal reductive elimination as the rate-limiting and selectivity-determining step, preceded by isoprene dimerization. The head-tail pathway is the kinetic pathway while the tail-tail product is the thermodynamic product. This functionalized lactone also shows promise for polymerization under Lewis acid-promoted conditions, opening avenues for sustainable polymers from CO and bio-derived feedstocks.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12394455PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-62409-2DOI Listing

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Gram-scale selective telomerization of isoprene and CO toward 100% renewable materials.

Nat Commun

August 2025

Department of Chemistry and Biotechnology, Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, 113-8656, Japan.

Carbon dioxide (CO) is an ideal chemical feedstock due to its abundance, low cost, low toxicity and its role as a greenhouse gas. Telomerization with butadiene give rise to functional small molecules and polymers with significant CO content, but the fossil origin of the olefin offsets sustainability benefits. Here, we present a palladium-catalyzed telomerization of CO with isoprene, two of the most prevalent organic compounds in the atmosphere, yielding "COOIL", an ideally 100% renewable δ-lactone containing 24 wt% CO, with high selectivity and turnover numbers above 100.

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The fragrance compound indomuscone is used here as a scaffold to prepare two different sterically hindered phosphines, one aromatic and another alkylic, in good yields, after four synthetic steps. The new phosphines show enhanced electronic and steric properties when compared to benchmark commercial phosphine ligands, which is reflected in the catalytic results obtained for representative palladium-catalyzed reactions such as the telomerization reaction, the Buchwald-Hartwig and Suzuki cross-coupling reactions of chloroaromatic rings, and the semi-hydrogenation reaction of an alkyne. In particular, the indomuscone-based aromatic phosphine ligand leads to the highest selectivity for the tail-to-head telomerization product between isoprene and methanol, while the indomuscone-based alkylic phosphine ligand shows extraordinary similarities with the Buchwald-type SPhos phosphine ligand.

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