The mechanical stresses that materials experience during use can lead to aging and failure. Recent developments in covalent mechanochemistry have provided a mechanism by which those stresses can be channeled into constructive, rather than destructive, responses, including strengthening in materials. Here, the synthesis and mechanical response of a polymer containing multiple benzocyclobutene (BCB) mechanophores along its backbone are reported. When solutions of the BCB polymer were exposed to the normally destructive elongational flow forces generated by pulsed ultrasonication, the number of intermolecular bond-forming reactions was greater than the number of bond-breaking reactions, leading to a net increase in polymer molecular weight. The molecular weight increase could be turned into gelation by introducing a bismaleimide cross-linker that reacts with the -quinodimethide intermediate generated by mechanically assisted ring opening of the BCB mechanophores and using polymer concentrations in excess of the critical overlap concentration. Unlike a previous mechanically induced gelation of a mechanophore-based polymer, the BCB cross-linking requires no ionic components and represents an attractive, second platform for stress-strengthening materials.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsmacrolett.5b00440 | DOI Listing |
Chem Sci
August 2024
Department of Chemistry, University of Manchester Manchester M13 9PL UK
Mechanical force is unique in promoting unusual reaction pathways and especially for the generation of reactive intermediates sometimes inaccessible to other forms of activation. The mechanochemical generation of reactive species could find application in synthetic and materials chemistry alike. However, the nature of these reactive intermediates has been mostly limited to radicals or carbenes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Macro Lett
August 2015
Department of Chemistry, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708, United States.
The mechanical stresses that materials experience during use can lead to aging and failure. Recent developments in covalent mechanochemistry have provided a mechanism by which those stresses can be channeled into constructive, rather than destructive, responses, including strengthening in materials. Here, the synthesis and mechanical response of a polymer containing multiple benzocyclobutene (BCB) mechanophores along its backbone are reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Org Chem
December 2015
Department of Chemistry, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708, United States.
Mechanical forces have previously been used to drive reactions along pathways that violate the orbital symmetry effects captured in the Woodward-Hoffmann rules. Here, we show that a polymer "lever arm effect" can provide a mechanical advantage in accelerating the symmetry forbidden disrotatory ring opening of benzocyclobutene (BCB). Addition of an α-E-alkene to the BCB mechanophore drops the force required to induce reactions on the ∼0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!