Mechanically Robust, Self-Healable, and Reprocessable Elastomers Enabled by Dynamic Dual Cross-Links
Macromolecules 52(10): 3805-3812
Article 2019 English
Authors
YC
Yi Chen
ZT
Zhenghai Tang
YL
Yingjun Liu
Abstract
1 min read
Covalent cross-linking of rubbers is essential for obtaining high resilience and environmental resistance but prevents healing and recycling. Integrating dynamic covalent bonds into cross-linked rubbers can resolve the trade-off between permanent cross-linking and plasticity. The state-of-the-art elastomer-based dynamic covalent networks require either intricate molecular makeup or present poor mechanical properties. In this work, we demonstrate a simple way to prepare mechanically robust yet healable and recyclable elastomeric vitrimers by engineering dynamic dual cross-links of boronic esters and coordination bonds into a commercial rubber. Specifically, epoxidized natural rubber is covalently cross-linked with a boronic ester cross-linker carrying dithiol through chemical reaction between epoxy and thiol groups. The covalently cross-linked networks are able to alter the topologies through boronic ester transesterifications, thereby conferring them with healing ability and reprocessability. In particular, the mechanical properties can be remarkably enhanced by introducing sacrificial metal–ligand coordination bonds into the networks without compromising the healing ability or reprocessability.
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