Diketoenamine-Based Vitrimers via Thiol-ene Photopolymerization.

Macromol Rapid Commun

School of Polymer Science and Engineering, The University of Southern Mississippi, 118 College Drive #5050, Hattiesburg, MS, 39406, USA.

Published: December 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Vitrimers are a unique class of materials that combine the properties of thermosets and thermoplastics, allowing for stability, self-healing, and reprocessing.
  • This study presents a specific type of vitrimer created using a photopolymerized thiol-ene approach, which allows for dynamic chemical exchanges and efficient reprocessing.
  • The research explores how varying reactant proportions can affect the material's properties, highlighting its potential for recycling and broader applications in chemical upcycling.

Article Abstract

Likened to both thermosets and thermoplastics, vitrimers are a unique class of materials that combine remarkable stability, healability, and reprocessability. Herein, this work describes a photopolymerized thiol-ene-based vitrimer that undergoes dynamic covalent exchanges through uncatalyzed transamination of enamines derived from cyclic β-triketones, whereby the low energy barrier for exchange facilitates reprocessing and enables rapid depolymerization. Accordingly, an alkene-functionalized β-triketone, 5,5-dimethyl-2-(pent-4-enoyl)cyclohexane-1,3-dione, is devised which is then reacted with 1,6-diaminohexane in a stoichiometrically imbalanced fashion (≈1:0.85 primary amine:triketone). The resulting networks exhibit subambient glass transition temperature (T = 5.66 °C) by differential scanning calorimetry. Using a Maxwell stress-relaxation fit, the topology-freezing temperature (T ) is calculated to be -32 °C. Small-amplitude oscillatory shear rheological analysis enables to identify a practical critical temperature above which the vitrimer can be successfully reprocessed (T ). Via the introduction of excess primary amines, this work can readily degrade the networks into monomeric precursors, which are in turn reacted with diamines to regenerate reprocessable networks. Photopolymerization provides unique spatiotemporal control over the network topology, thereby opening the path for further investigation of vitrimer properties. As such, this work expands the toolbox of chemical upcycling of networks and enables their wider implementation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/marc.202200249DOI Listing

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