Design, Exploitation, and Rational Improvements of Diazirine-Based Universal Polymer Crosslinkers.

Acc Chem Res

Department of Chemistry, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia V8W 3V6, Canada.

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Crosslinking thermoplastic polymers can enhance their mechanical strength and high-temperature performance, but traditional methods require specific technologies for each polymer type.
  • Our lab has created the first universal crosslinkers using trifluoromethyl aryl diazirine motifs, effective on a wide range of polymers, including those that have been difficult to crosslink like polypropylene.
  • Improved versions of these crosslinkers have been developed, resulting in over 10 times greater effectiveness, and new methods allow for on-demand generation of reprocessable thermosets, expanding potential applications in materials science.

Article Abstract

ConspectusAddition of new covalent bonds between the chains of thermoplastic polymers (i.e., crosslinking) provides improved mechanical strength and enhanced high-temperature performance while also providing an effective strategy for photopatterning. Traditionally, however, crosslinking of each polymer substrate has required the use of a specific crosslinking technology (hydrosilylation for PDMS, vulcanization for rubber, etc.). The lack of a general solution to the challenge of polymer crosslinking means that there are many thermoplastics (e.g., polypropylene or polyhydroxyalkanoates) that have desirable properties, but which cannot be upgraded by traditional crosslinking technologies.Our lab developed the first universal crosslinkers for aliphatic polymers by leveraging trifluoromethyl aryl diazirine motifs, functional groups that have been widely used in chemical biology for >30 years, but which have seldom been exploited in materials science. These novel reagents work (via C-H insertion) on essentially any commodity polymer that contains aliphatic C-H bonds, including industrial plastics like polypropylene (the crosslinking of which has been an outstanding challenge in the field for >50 years), as well as commercially important elastomers (e.g., polydimethylsiloxane), biodegradable polymers (e.g., polycaprolactone), and green polymer materials derived from biomass (e.g., polyhydroxyalkanoates).Subsequent structure-function work from our group led to crosslinkers that were >10-fold more effective in undergoing C-H insertion with aliphatic substrates. We then developed an improved synthesis of our electronically optimized diazirines and incorporated them into a family of cleavable crosslinker reagents, which permit the on-demand generation of reprocessable thermosets. At the same time, other groups replaced the perfluoropropyl linker in our first-generation crosslinker with a series of dynamic linkages; these permit the ready generation of vitrimeric materials and can be used in the reactive compatibilization of immiscible plastic waste.Since the publication of our initial paper in 2019, this burgeoning field of diazirine-based polymer crosslinkers has experienced an explosion of interest. Publications from our lab and others have described the use of these reagents in covalent adhesion, photopatterning of low dielectric materials for microelectronics, and direct optical printing of quantum dots. Our crosslinkers have also been shown to heighten the robustness of ice-phobic coatings and improve the performance of woven ballistic fabric, while─perhaps most unexpectedly─substantially improving the stability of high-performance perovskite solar cells. Electronically optimized diazirines can also be used to covalently link proteins to polymer surfaces, suggesting a broad range of applications in the biocompatibilization of medical devices. This Account will summarize the development of trifluoromethyl aryl diazirine reagents for materials science over the past 5 years. A brief comparison will also be made, in the Summary and Outlook section at the end of the Account, to competing (and often complementary) reagents based upon azide and diazoalkyl motifs. Finally, we have compiled a Frequently Asked Questions list that covers many practical aspects of crosslinker design and application; this is appended as Supporting Information.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.4c00509DOI Listing

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