Polyester fibers, comprising mostly poly(ethylene terephthalate) with high crystalline content, represent the most commonly produced plastic for ubiquitous textiles, and approximately 60 million tons are manufactured annually worldwide. Considering the social issues of mismanaged waste produced from used textile products, there is an urgent demand for sustainable waste polyester fiber recycling methods. We developed a low-temperature, rapid, and efficient depolymerization method for recycling polyester fibers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe chemical structure of a branch point of star-shaped polymers has been considered to have a small influence on the physical properties of the entire polymer. Contrary to this general notion, here we show that a 3-arm star polymer, composed of three poly(δ-valerolactone) arms extended from one side of a triptycene branch point, exhibits a remarkably high complex viscosity, compared to the analogous star-shaped polymers with a branch point of a triptycene isomer or triphenylethane.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA surprising terminal-group effect on the structural and physical properties of an amorphous polymer is reported. We recently demonstrated that triptycene derivatives with substituents at the 1,8,13-positions show specific self-assembly behavior, enabling the formation of a well-defined "2D + 1D" structure based on nested hexagonal packing of the triptycenes. Upon terminal functionalization with a 1,8-substituted triptycene (1,8-Trip), a liquid polymer, polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS, M = 18-24 kDa), turned into a highly viscous solid that exhibits birefringence at 25 °C.
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