TY - JOUR
T1 - Vitrimers Designed Both to Strongly Suppress Creep and to Recover Original Cross-Link Density after Reprocessing
T2 - Quantitative Theory and Experiments
AU - Li, Lingqiao
AU - Chen, Xi
AU - Jin, Kailong
AU - Torkelson, John M.
N1 - Funding Information:
We acknowledge support of Northwestern University via discretionary funds associated with a Walter P. Murphy Professorship (J.M.T.), ISEN Fellowships (L.L.; X.C.), and a Terminal Year Fellowship (K.J.). We thank Prof. L. C. Brinson for generously providing access to the DMA instrument.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 American Chemical Society.
Copyright:
Copyright 2018 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2018/8/14
Y1 - 2018/8/14
N2 - Vitrimers form a promising class of dynamic polymer networks, but they have an Achilles' heel: elastomeric vitrimers exhibit significant creep under conditions where permanently cross-linked, elastomeric networks exhibit little or no creep. We demonstrate that vitrimers can be designed with strongly suppressed creep and excellent reprocessability by incorporating a substantial yet subcritical fraction of permanent cross-links. This critical fraction of permanent cross-links, which has little or no detrimental effect on reprocessability, is defined by the gelation point of only permanent cross-links leading to a percolated permanent network. Via a modification of classic Flory-Stockmayer theory, we have developed a simple theory that quantitatively predicts an approximate limiting fraction. To test our theory, we designed vitrimers with controlled fractions of permanent cross-links based on thiol-epoxy click chemistry. We characterized the rubbery plateau modulus before and after reprocessing as well as stress relaxation of our original vitrimers. Our experimental results strongly support our theoretical prediction: as long as the fraction of permanent cross-links is insufficient to form a percolated permanent network, the vitrimer can be reprocessed with full recovery of cross-link density. In particular, with a predicted limiting fraction of 50 mol %, a vitrimer system designed with 40 mol % permanent cross-links achieved full property recovery associated with cross-link density after reprocessing as well as 65-71% creep reduction (for both original and reprocessed samples) relative to a similar vitrimer without permanent cross-links. In contrast, a system with 60 mol % permanent cross-links could not be reprocessed into a well-consolidated sample, nor did it recover full cross-link density; it failed by breaking at early stages of creep tests. The ability to predict an approximate limiting fraction of permanent cross-links leading to enhanced creep resistance and full reprocessability represents an important advance in the science and design of vitrimers.
AB - Vitrimers form a promising class of dynamic polymer networks, but they have an Achilles' heel: elastomeric vitrimers exhibit significant creep under conditions where permanently cross-linked, elastomeric networks exhibit little or no creep. We demonstrate that vitrimers can be designed with strongly suppressed creep and excellent reprocessability by incorporating a substantial yet subcritical fraction of permanent cross-links. This critical fraction of permanent cross-links, which has little or no detrimental effect on reprocessability, is defined by the gelation point of only permanent cross-links leading to a percolated permanent network. Via a modification of classic Flory-Stockmayer theory, we have developed a simple theory that quantitatively predicts an approximate limiting fraction. To test our theory, we designed vitrimers with controlled fractions of permanent cross-links based on thiol-epoxy click chemistry. We characterized the rubbery plateau modulus before and after reprocessing as well as stress relaxation of our original vitrimers. Our experimental results strongly support our theoretical prediction: as long as the fraction of permanent cross-links is insufficient to form a percolated permanent network, the vitrimer can be reprocessed with full recovery of cross-link density. In particular, with a predicted limiting fraction of 50 mol %, a vitrimer system designed with 40 mol % permanent cross-links achieved full property recovery associated with cross-link density after reprocessing as well as 65-71% creep reduction (for both original and reprocessed samples) relative to a similar vitrimer without permanent cross-links. In contrast, a system with 60 mol % permanent cross-links could not be reprocessed into a well-consolidated sample, nor did it recover full cross-link density; it failed by breaking at early stages of creep tests. The ability to predict an approximate limiting fraction of permanent cross-links leading to enhanced creep resistance and full reprocessability represents an important advance in the science and design of vitrimers.
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U2 - 10.1021/acs.macromol.8b00922
DO - 10.1021/acs.macromol.8b00922
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85051426911
SN - 0024-9297
VL - 51
SP - 5537
EP - 5546
JO - Macromolecules
JF - Macromolecules
IS - 15
ER -