| Literature DB >> 31792214 |
Anjeza Beharaj1, Ethan Z McCaslin1, William A Blessing1, Mark W Grinstaff2.
Abstract
Pressure sensitive adhesives are ubiquitous in commodity products such as tapes, bandages, labels, packaging, and insulation. With single use plastics comprising almost half of yearly plastic production, it is essential that the design, synthesis, and decomposition products of future materials, including polymer adhesives, are within the context of a healthy ecosystem along with comparable or superior performance to conventional materials. Here we show a series of sustainable polymeric adhesives, with an eco-design, that perform in both dry and wet environments. The terpolymerization of propylene oxide, glycidyl butyrate, and CO2, catalyzed by a cobalt salen complex bearing a quaternary ammonium salt, yields the poly(propylene-co-glycidyl butyrate carbonate)s (PPGBC)s. This polymeric adhesive system, composed of environmentally benign building blocks, implements carbon dioxide sequestration techniques, poses minimal environmental hazards, exhibits varied peel strengths from scotch tape to hot-melt wood-glue, and adheres to metal, glass, wood, and Teflon® surfaces.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31792214 PMCID: PMC6889139 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-13449-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Chemical structures of commercial adhesives (a), and carbonate terpolymers (b). c Image of PPGBC, a clear highly viscous liquid. d Final products of complete polymer decomposition.
Terpolymerization of GB/PO/CO2 catalyzed by (S,S)-[SalcyCoIIIDNP]DNP.
| Entry | TOF (h−1)c | Selectivity (%)d | Tg °Ce | Mn (kg/mol)f | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PGBC-100 | 100:0 | 100:0 | 74 | 85 | −7 | 12.4 | 1.20 |
| PPGBC-87 | 90:10 | 87:13 | 78 | 86 | −30 | 6.1 | 1.12 |
| PPGBC-74 | 70:30 | 74:26 | 129 | 82 | −29 | 6.0 | 1.10 |
| PPGBC-56 | 50:50 | 56:44 | 144 | 95 | −9 | 8.6 | 1.08 |
| PPGBC-33 | 30:70 | 33:67 | 158 | 90 | −12 | 13.6 | 1.11 |
| PPGBC-22 | 10:90 | 22:78 | 225 | 99 | 0 | 9.6 | 1.11 |
| PPC-100 | 0:100 | 0:100 | 444 | >99 | 28 | 22 | 1.18 |
The reaction was performed in neat epoxide (10 mmol) in a 15 mL autoclave under 2.7 MPa CO2 pressure at 40 °C with 2000:1 catalyst loading
aMolar ratio of monomer feed
bMolar ratio of monomer incorporation in polymer chain
cTurnover frequency (TOF) = mole of product (polycarbonates)/mol of cat. per hour. Reactions were stopped at ~60% conversion
dPercent of polymer formed vs. cyclic carbonate as determined by 1H NMR
eDetermined by DSC analysis
fDetermined by gel permeation chromatography in THF, calibrated with polystyrene standards
Fig. 2Probabilistic sequence distribution of monomers in the terpolymer. a Fineman–Ross plot of PPGBC at low conversions. X = [f[GB]/f[PO], Y = [F[GB]/F[PO]], H = Y2/X, G = Y(X − 1)/X. b Schematic of propagation reactions. Source data are provided as a Source Data file and data for Fig. 2a is provided in Supplementary Table 1.
Fig. 3Adhesive and rheometric properties of terpolymers under various conditions. a Peel testing (180°) at room temperature (22 °C) of viscous poly(propylene-co-glycidyl butyrate carbonate)s and commercial adhesives (n = 3). b Tack strength of PPGBC-56 applied to four surfaces at room temperature (n = 3). c Tack strength of PPGBC-56 with 1 Newton of applied axial force at different temperatures tested in atmospheric conditions and underwater (n = 3). d Tack Strength vs. different applied axial pressure for PPGBC-56. e Frequency sweep of the complex viscosity (η) of PPGBC-56 at three different temperature ranges (n = 3). f Frequency sweep of the storage (G′) and loss (G″) modulus of PPGBC-56 at 20, 37, and 50 °C. Source data are provided as a Source Data file for Figs. 3–d. Error bars indicate mean ± s.e.m. and all significance testing was conducted using ANOVA.
Fig. 4Adhesive system with thermoresponsive bonding and debonding. a Glass cube (20 g) coated with PPGBC-56 in DI water with a steel rod (35 g, 50.3 mm2 surface area) placed on top. At 21 °C, the adhesive is not able to bond to the rod and the adhesive system is inactive. b At 37 °C, there is sufficient bonding to pick up the glass cube. At 50 °C, the adhesive weakens and detachment of the cube from the rod occurs. Lowering the temperature to 37 °C repeats the bonding/debonding cycle. Lowering the temperature further to 21 °C returns the system to the inactive state.