AI Article Synopsis

  • This study introduces a novel method using copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) to create a tough, stiff, and porous material with a high glass transition temperature.
  • The comparison between the CuAAC foam and an epoxy-amine foam showed that the CuAAC foam had superior mechanical properties, demonstrating three times higher toughness and significant ductility at high strains.
  • The CuAAC foam also exhibited excellent shape recovery after compression cycles, showcasing its potential as a "reversible plasticity" material suitable for glassy shape memory applications.

Article Abstract

This study is the first to employ the use of the copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) polymerization to form a tough and stiff, porous material from a well-defined network possessing a high glass transition temperature. The effect of the network linkages formed as a product of the CuAAC reaction, i.e., the triazoles, on the mechanical behavior at high strain was evaluated by comparing the CuAAC foam to an epoxy-amine-based foam, which consisted of monomers with similar backbone structures and mechanical properties (i.e., T of 115 °C and a rubbery modulus of 1.0 MPa for the CuAAC foam, T of 125 °C and a rubbery modulus of 1.2 MPa for the epoxy-amine foam). When each foam was compressed uniformly to 80% strain at ambient temperature, the epoxy-amine foam was severely damaged after only reaching 70% strain in the first compression cycle with a toughness of 300 MJ/m. In contrast, the CuAAC foam exhibited pronounced ductile behavior in the glassy state with three times higher toughness of 850 MJ/m after the first cycle of compression to 80% strain. Additionally, when the CuAAC foam was heated above T after each of five compression cycles to 80% strain at ambient temperature, the foam completely recovered its original shape while exhibiting a gradual decrease in mechanical performance over the multiple compression cycles. The foam demonstrated almost complete shape fixity and recovery ratios even through five successive cycles, indicative of "reversible plasticity", making it highly desirable as a glassy shape memory foams.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5736377PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c7py01121kDOI Listing

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