Reversibly growing crosslinked polymers with programmable sizes and properties

Growth constitutes a powerful method to post-modulate materials’ structures and functions without compromising their mechanical performance for sustainable use, but the process is irreversible. To address this issue, we here report a growing-degrowing strategy that enables thermosetting materials to...

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Published inNature communications Vol. 14; no. 1; p. 3302
Main Authors Zhou, Xiaozhuang, Zheng, Yijun, Zhang, Haohui, Yang, Li, Cui, Yubo, Krishnan, Baiju P., Dong, Shihua, Aizenberg, Michael, Xiong, Xinhong, Hu, Yuhang, Aizenberg, Joanna, Cui, Jiaxi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 06.06.2023
Nature Publishing Group
Nature Portfolio
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Summary:Growth constitutes a powerful method to post-modulate materials’ structures and functions without compromising their mechanical performance for sustainable use, but the process is irreversible. To address this issue, we here report a growing-degrowing strategy that enables thermosetting materials to either absorb or release components for continuously changing their sizes, shapes, compositions, and a set of properties simultaneously. The strategy is based on the monomer-polymer equilibrium of networks in which supplying or removing small polymerizable components would drive the networks toward expansion or contraction. Using acid-catalyzed equilibration of siloxane as an example, we demonstrate that the size and mechanical properties of the resulting silicone materials can be significantly or finely tuned in both directions of growth and decomposition. The equilibration can be turned off to yield stable products or reactivated again. During the degrowing-growing circle, material structures are selectively varied either uniformly or heterogeneously, by the availability of fillers. Our strategy endows the materials with many appealing capabilities including environment adaptivity, self-healing, and switchability of surface morphologies, shapes, and optical properties. Since monomer-polymer equilibration exists in many polymers, we envision the expansion of the presented strategy to various systems for many applications. Growth constitutes a powerful method to post-modulate materials’ structures and functions without compromising their mechanical performance for sustainable use, but the process is irreversible. To address this issue, the authors here report a growing-degrowing strategy that enables thermosetting materials to either absorb or release components for continuously changing their sizes, shapes, compositions, and a set of properties simultaneously.
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National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)
USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES)
SC0005247; 51973023; 52073175; 52003035
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-023-38768-z