Is anyone familiar with a solvent that might strongly suppress ionic polymerization?
I have one reaction in which unwanted ionic polymerization is largely responsible for depletion of the starting material, and the wanted reaction works only in presence of a metal triflate catalyst. Unfortunately the substrate, which is a ring, undergoes ring-opening and cationic polymerization in the presence of triflate and everything goes wasted. The approaches I was thinking about to fix that are:
a) take a similar metal catalyst with a counterion different than triflate (tried, that didn't work)
b) take a solvent which might strongly suppress cationic polymerization somehow (but I don't know any, checked Odian and there is nothing about that)
c) make the triflate anion solvated and "excluded" to some extent in some non-polar solvent (in a same way in which e.g. some potassium salts get dissolved in presence of 18-crown-6).
Does anyone know something analogous to crown ethers but for anions, either triflate or in general?