Abstract: | For many years, considerable research efforts have been dedicated to π‐conjugated polymers because of their extraordinary electronic, optical, and structural properties. The employed transition‐metal‐based initiating systems comprise not only simple transition‐metal salts but also rather sophisticated mixtures of two, three, or four compounds and even highly defined single‐component systems such as transition‐metal alkylidene complexes. Extensive fine‐tuning of the electronic and steric properties of initiator–monomer systems eventually allowed the tailor‐made synthesis of conjugated materials via living polymerization techniques. This article focuses on recent developments in the field of the living polymerization of substituted acetylene derivatives. Ill‐defined group 5 and 6 transition metal halide‐based initiators, well‐defined transition‐metal alkylidene complexes, and rhodium(I)‐based systems that induce the living polymerization of numerous substituted acetylenes are reviewed. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part A: Polym Chem 43: 5723–5747, 2005 |