| Literature DB >> 34067106 |
Jonathan Goff1, Santy Sulaiman1, Barry Arkles1.
Abstract
Increasingly precise control of polymer architectures generated by "Living" Anionic Ring-Opening Polymerization (Living AROP) is leading to a broad range of commercial advanced material applications, particularly in the area of siloxane macromers. While academic reports on such materials remain sparse, a significant portion of the global population interacts with them on a daily basis-in applications including medical devices, microelectronics, food packaging, synthetic leather, release coatings, and pigment dispersions. The primary driver of this increased utilization of siloxane macromers is their ability to incorporate the properties of silicones into organic structures in a balanced manner. Compared to organic polymers, the differentiating properties of silicones-low Tg, hydrophobicity, low surface energy, and high free molal space-logically lend themselves to applications in which low modulus, release, permeability to oxygen and moisture, and tactile interaction are desired. However, their mechanical, structural and processing properties have until recently precluded practical applications. This review presents applications of "Living" AROP derived polymers from the perspective of historical technology development. Applications in which products are produced on a commercial scale-defined as not only offered for sale, but sold on a recurrent basis-are emphasized. Hybrid polymers with intriguing nanoscale morphology and potential applications in photoresist, microcontact printing, biomimetic soft materials, and liquid crystals are also discussed. Previously unreported work by the authors is provided in the context of this review.Entities:
Keywords: biomimetic polymers; breathable films; contact lenses; high elongation elastomers; hybrid polymers; membranes; photoresists; ring-opening polymerization
Year: 2021 PMID: 34067106 PMCID: PMC8124341 DOI: 10.3390/molecules26092755
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Synthetic methods for preparation of siloxane and siloxane-hybrid polymers.
Scheme 1Kinetically Controlled Polymerization.
Scheme 2Thermodynamic Equilibrium Driven Processes (i.e., Reversion, Backbiting, Chain-scrambling).
Scheme 3Ion-pair Complexation by Dimethoxyethane (DME) Promoter Favors Chain-End Over Internal Scrambling [5].
Figure 2Comparison of silicone macromers demonstrating polymer termini scrambling (GC of methacrylate functional macromer (MCR-M11) with a nominal MW of 1000 showing shift from Triad to Gaussian distribution with a change in promoter. (Author’s work)).
Figure 3Time-dependent ROP polymer growth of strained versus unstrained cyclosiloxanes.
Scheme 4Polydimethylsiloxane macromers with symmetric architectures, produced via the anionic ring-opening polymerization of a cyclic trisiloxane and subsequent coupling with a functional dihalogen-substituted silane reagent, have recently been described.
Scheme 5Siloxane Macromer Structural Segments.
Scheme 6Symmetric macromers can contain a pendant methacrylate group bisecting the polydimethylsiloxane backbone.
Scheme 7Symmetric silicone macromer with methacrylate functionality bisection.
Scheme 8Carbinol terminated telelechelic with macromeric methacrylate functionality.
Cyclic Siloxane Macromer “Building Blocks”.
| Cyclic Siloxane Macromer Monomers | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Class | Structure | MW | B.P. | CAS# | References |
|
| |||||
| Hexamethylcyclotrisiloxane |
| 222.46 | 134° | 541-05-9 | Hyde [ |
| Hexaphenylcyclotrisiloxane |
| 594.89 | 300°/1 | 512-63-0 | Bostick [ |
| Trivinyltrimethylcyclotrisiloxane |
| 258.50 | 80°/20 | 3901-77-7 | Pike [ |
| Tris(3,3,3-trifluoropropyl)trimethylcyclotrisiloxane |
| 468.55 | 95°/3 | 2374-14-3 | Pierce [ |
| 2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-2,5-disila-1-oxacyclopentane |
| 160.36 | 124° | 7418-20-4 | Piccolli [ |
|
| |||||
| Hexaethylcyclotrisiloxane |
| 306.82 | 117°/10 | 2031-79-0 | Dobay [ |
| Vinylpentamethylcyclotrisiloxane |
| 234.47 | 56°/23 | 18395-32-9 | Rózga-Wijas [ |
| Tris(tetramethylsiloxanylethyl)trimethylcyclotrisiloxane |
| 661.47 | 175°–185°/2 | 2378614-30-1 | Goff [ |
| 1,3,5-[Tris(methoxyethoxyethoxypropyltetramethyldisiloxanyl)ethyl]-1,3,5-trimethylcyclotrisiloxane |
| 1142.10 | 2378623-20-0 | Goff [ | |
Initiators.
| Non-Functional Initiators | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Class | Structure | Comments | References |
|
| |||
| n-Butyl lithium |
| Most common initiator; stable and economic | Chojnowski [ |
| s-Butyl lithium |
| Less initial back-biting than n-butyl but less stable; used for substituted aryl-cyclic trisiloxane; used for higher alkylcyclo-trisiloxanes | Hawkridge [ |
| t-Butyl lithium |
| Hempenius [ | |
| Phenyl lithium |
| Initiator for PDMS MW standard | Arkles [ |
| Trimethylsilylmethyl lithium |
| For diMeSiO-ViMeSiO block polymers | Boileau [ |
|
| |||
| Polybutadienyl lithium |
| Molenberg [ | |
| Polystyryl lithium |
| Formation of block and star polymers—varied block size for nanopatterning | Saam [ |
| Poly a-methylstyryl lithium |
| Saam [ | |
|
| |||
| Trimethylsilanol lithium salt |
| Formed from D4 + Methyllithium; initiates tetramethyldisila-oxacyclopentane polymerization | Clemens [ |
|
| Formed from D4 + n-Butyllithium | Fessler [ | |
| Fluoroalkyldimethylsilanol lithium salt |
| Formed in situ from silanol and n-Butyllithium | Saho [ |
| Methoxypropyldimethylsilanol lithium salt |
| Arkles [ | |
| Methoxyethoxyethoxypropyldimethylsilanol lithium salt |
| Hydrophilic silicone macromers for contact lenses | Goff [ |
| Methoxyethoxyethoxyethoxypropyldimethylsilanol lithium salt |
| Hydrophilic additive for silicone elastomers | Goff [ |
| Tetrahydrofurfuryloxpropyldimethylsilanol lithium salt |
| Hydrophilic additive for implantable silicones | Goff [ |
|
| |||
| Diphenylsilanediol, dilithium salt |
| Initiator for pentamethylcyclo trisiloxane; initiator for trifluoropropyltrimethylcyclotrisiloxane | Paulasaari [ |
| Tetramethyldisiloxane-1,3 diol dilithium salt |
| Gadda [ | |
| 1,3-diphenyl-1,3-dimethylsiloxanediol, dilithium salt |
| Bostick [ | |
| Bis(p-hydroxydimethylsilyl)phenyl ether, dilithium salt |
| Used to form telechelic vinyl-terminated polymers | Kazama [ |
| Branched siloxanes, multiple lithium salts | Branched vinyl-terminated siloxanes | Ogawa [ | |
| Branched carbosilanes, multiple lithium salts | Used to form multi-arm and dendrimer-like structures | Novozhilov [ | |
|
| |||
| Dilithiobenzophenone |
| Siloxane methacrylate copolymers | Juliano [ |
| Dilithiofluorenone |
| Color change when D3 polymerization initiated | Juliano [ |
|
| |||
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |||
| Allyl lithium |
| Functionalized polydiethylsiloxane | Out [ |
| t-Butyldimethylsiloxypropyl lithium |
| Deprotected to form hydroxyl termination | Arkles [ |
| N-Benzyl-N-methylaminopropyl lithium |
| Can be deprotected to provide N-methylaminopropyl termination | Elkins [ |
| Bis(trimethylsilyl)aminophenyl lithium |
| Deprotected to form aminophenyl termination | Babu [ |
|
| |||
| Vinyldimethylsilanol lithium salt |
| Goff [ | |
| Vinylbutylmethylsilanol lithium salt |
| Arkles [ | |
| Hydridobutylmethylsilanol lithium salt |
| Arkles [ | |
| 1-Hexenyl, 4-Hydroxyl-octamethyltetrasiloxane lithium salt |
| Okawa [ | |
|
| |||
| Lithium anion of Na pentanedionate |
| Forms Na AcAc-terminated polymer, but not stable after neutralization | Kumar [ |
| 1,5,7-Triazabicyclo [4.4.0] dec-5-ene |
| Used in the polymerization of monodisperse silanol-terminated siloxanes | Lohmeijer [ |
| 1,3-Trimethylene-n-propylguanidine |
| Used in combination with water and silanols | Fuchise [ |
Commonly Reported Macromers.
| Asymmetric Monofunctional Siloxanes | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Code * | Description | Molecular Weight, Mn | Viscosity, cSt | Density | Refractive Index | Reference |
|
| ||||||
| MCR-A11 | monoAMINOPROPYL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 800–1000 | 8–12 | 0.82 | 1.411 | [ |
| MCR-A12 | monoAMINOPROPYL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 2000 | 18–25 | 0.97 | 1.411 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCR-W15 | monoACRYLAMIDOPROPYL TERMINATED POLYDIMTHYLSILOXANE | 1000–1500 | 50–75 | 0.96 | 1.418 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCR-C12 | monoCARBINOL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 1000 | 15–20 | 0.96 | 1.409 | [ |
| MCR-C18 | monoCARBINOL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 5000 | 80–90 | 0.97 | 1.405 | [ |
| MCR-C22 | monoCARBINOL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 10,000 | 250 | 0.98 | 1.404 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCR-C61 | monoDICARBINOL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 1000 | 50–60 | 0.97 | 1.417 | [ |
| MCR-C62 | monoDICARBINOL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 5000 | 100–125 | 0.97 | 1.409 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCR-B12 | monoCARBOXYDECYL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 1500 | 20 | 0.94 | 1.415 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCR-E11 | Mono(2,3-EPOXY)PROPYLETHER TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 1000 | 10–15 | 0.96 | 1.410 | [ |
| MCR-E21 | Mono(2,3-EPOXY)PROPYLETHER TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 5000 | 120 | 0.97 | 1.408 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCR-H07 | MonoHYDRIDE TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 800–900 | 5–8 | 0.96 | 1.404 | [ |
| MCR-H11 | MonoHYDRIDE TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 900–1100 | 8–12 | 0.96 | 1.407 | [ |
| MCR-H21 | MonoHYDRIDE TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 4500–5000 | 80–120 | 0.96 | 1.411 | [ |
| MCR-H22 | MonoHYDRIDE TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 10,000 | 160–220 | 0.98 | 1.411 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCR-M07 | MonoMETHACRYLOXYPROPYL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 600–800 | 6–9 | 0.96 | 1.416 | [ |
| MCR-M11 | MonoMETHACRYLOXYPROPYL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 800–1000 | 10–11 | 0.96 | 1.411 | [ |
| MCR-M17 | MonoMETHACRYLOXYPROPYL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 5000 | 70–80 | 0.97 | 1.406 | [ |
| MCR-M22 | MonoMETHACRYLOXYPROPYL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 10,000 | 150–200 | 0.97 | 1.405 | [ |
|
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| MCR-MXe11 | MonoMETHACRYLOXYETHOXY-PROPYL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 900–1000 | 9–10 | 0.95 | 1.415 | None? |
|
| ||||||
| MCR-MXt11 | MonoMETHACRYLOXYPROPYL, MonoMETHOXYPROPYL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 800–1000 | 8–12 | 0.96 | 1.430 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MFR-M15 | MonoMETHACRYLOXYPROPYL TERMINATED POLYTRIFLUOROPROPYLMETHYLSILOXANE | 800–1000 | 50–70 | 1.09 | 1.398 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCR-ST11 | MonoSTYRYL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 800–1000 | 8–15 | 0.95 | 1.429 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCR-V21 | MonoVINYL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 5500–6500 | 80–120 | 0.97 | 1.403 | [ |
| MCR-V25 | MonoVINYL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 15,000–20,000 | 400–600 | 0.97 | 1.403 | [ |
| MCR-V41 | MonoVINYL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 55,000–65,000 | 8000–12,000 | 0.98 | 1.404 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCR-XT11 | MonoTRIETHOXYSILYLETHYL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 500–1000 | 16–24 | 0.97 | 1.412 | [ |
|
| ||||||
|
| ||||||
| MCS-C13 | MonoCARBINOL FUNCTIONAL POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE, symmetric | 550–650 | 35–40 | 1.02 | 1.446 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCS-E15 | Mono(2,3-EPOXY)PROPYL ETHER FUNCTIONAL POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE, symmetric | 800–900 | 45–55 | 1.09 | 1.398 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCS-M11 | MonoMETHACRYLOXYPROPYL FUNCTIONAL POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE, symmetric | 800–1000 | 7–9 | 0.93 | 1.417 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCS-MXt11 | MonoMETHACRYLOXYPROPYL FUNCTIONAL POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE, METHOXYPROPYL TERMINATED, symmetric | 900–1100 | 8–12 | 0.96 | 1.43 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCS-V212 | MonoVINYL TERMINATED POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE, symmetric | 1200–1400 | 16–24 | 0.97 | 1.419 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCS-VF14 | monoVINYL FUNCTIONAL POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE, TETRAHYDROFURFURYLOXYPROPYL TERMINATED—symmetric | 1000–1200 | 30–40 | 0.976 | 1.4141 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| MCS-VXt15 | MonoVINYL FUNCTIONAL POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE, METHOXY(DIETHYLENEOXIDE)PROPYL TERMINATED, symmetric | 1000–1200 | 40–60 | 0.96 | 1.42 | [ |
* In order to provide a concise description of the macromer systems discussed, the following designation system was adopted: the first two letters, MC, indicate macromer M structure with a C conventional dimethylsiloxane repeat unit; the third letter indicates whether it is asymmetric (R), symmetric (S), or T-structure (T). Macromer functionality and viscosity are indicated after a hyphen, as follows: (1) letters indicate functionality, where M is methacrylate, H is hydride, C is carbinol, V is vinyl, and E is methoxy; (2) numbers are the viscosity ranges of the macromer in powers of 10, followed by the first significant figure. For example, MCR-H25 indicates a macromer, an asymmetric architecture with hydride functionality, and a viscosity of 102 × 5 or 500 cSt. These designations provide a facile method of discussing comparative structures but are not intended to be detailed structural descriptions of the polymers. To remove ambiguity for ethyleneoxy designated X spacer groups, the lower-case letter t, for “tipped”, or e, for “embedded”, is used.
Monodisperse Difunctional Macromers.
| Heterobifunctional Siloxanes | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Code | Description | Molecular Weight, Mn | Viscosity, cSt | Density | Refractive Index | Reference |
|
| ||||||
| DMS-HV15 | monoVINYL-monoHYDRIDE terminated POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 2000–3000 | 40–60 | 0.96 | 1.404 | [ |
| DMS-HV22 | monoVINYL-monoHYDRIDE terminated POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 10,000 | 150–250 | 0.97 | 1.403 | [ |
| DMS-HV31 | monoVINYL-monoHYDRIDE terminated POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 25,000 | 600–1000 | 0.97 | 1.403 | [ |
|
| ||||||
| PMM-HV12 | α-monoVINYL,monoPHENYL-ω-monoHYDRIDE terminated POLYDIMETHYLSILOXANE | 2000 | 20 | 0.97 | 1.414 | [ |
Reactivity Ratios of Methacrylate Functional Siloxane Macromers.
| Siloxane Macromer | Comonomer | Reactivity Ratio (r1:r2) * |
|---|---|---|
| MCR-M11 | Methylmethacrylate | nm **:1.60 |
| MCR-M22 | nm **:2.10 | |
| MCR-M11 | Styrene | 0.26:1.07 |
| MCR-M11 | Acrylonitrile | 5.40:0.89 |
* Rate constants—M1M1/M1M2: M2M2/M2M1; ** no meaningful results.
Solubility of Methacrylate Functional Silicone Macromers *.
| Siloxane Macromer—Methacrylate Functional | Macromer Solubility in Hydrogel Monomers | Water Solubility in Macromer (ppm) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dimethylacrylamide (DMA) | Hydroxyethylmethacrylate (HEMA) | ||
| MCR-M11 (asymmetric) | 4% | 1% | 2000 |
| MCS-M11 (symmetric) | 8% | 2% | 3500 |
| MFR-M15 (fluorinated asymmetric) | 100% (miscible) | 2% | 9000 |
| MFS-M15 (fluorinated symmetric) | 100% (miscible) | 3% | 10,000 |
| MCS-MXt11 (methoxy-tipped, symmetric) | 100% (miscible) | 100% (miscible) | 10,000 |
* Author’s work, previously unreported.
Figure 4(a) Silicone hydrogel lenses incorporate low MW macromers into otherwise hydrophilic matrices based on hydroxyethylmethacrylate or dimethylacrylamide; (b) comparison of contact lens materials and oxygen transport to the cornea (redrawn with permission from Ref. [122] Copyright 1983 the Technomic Publication). (c) Hydrogel phase structure as a determinant of lens comfort (redrawn with permission from Ref. [121] Copyright 2001 Elsevier Science).
Silicone Hydrogel Contact Lens Technology.
| Technology Generation | Proprietary Name | Material | Manufacturer | Launch Date | Water Content (%) | Dk | O2 Transport Enhancer | Hydrophilic Component * | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | PureVision | Balafilcon A | Bausch & Lomb | 1998 | 36 | 91 | TRIS, Difunctional siloxane | NVP amino acid monomer | |
| Focus Night & Day | Lotrfilcon A | CIBA Vision | 1999 | 24 | 140 | TRIS, Difunctional fluorosiloxane | DMA | Nicolson [ | |
| AirOptix | Lotrafilcon B | CIBA Vision | 1999 | 33 | 110 | TRIS, Difunctional fluorosiloxane | DMA | Nicolson [ | |
| 2 | Biofinity | Cofilcon A | Cooper vision | 2007 | 48 | 128 | Monofunctional siloxane macromer | VMA | Ueyama [ |
| Acuvue OASYS | Senfilcon A | JJVC | 2004 | 38 | 103 | SiGMA monomer, monofunctional siloxane macromer (MCR-M11) | DMA, HEMA, PVP | Vanderlaan [ | |
| PremuiO | Amofilcon A | Menicon | 2007 | 40 | 129 | Difunctional fluorosiloxane macromer | DMA | ||
| Acuvue Advance | Gayfilcon A | JJVC | 2004 | 47 | 60 | SiGMA monomer, monofunctional siloxane macromer (MCR-M11) | DMA, HEMA, PVP | Vanderlaan [ | |
| 3 | 1-DAY Acuvue TruEYE | Narfilcon A | JJVC | 2008 | 46 | 100 | SiGMA monomer, monofunctional siloxane macromers (OH-mPDMS, MCR-M11) | DMA, HEMA, PVP | Vanderlaan [ |
| Clariti 1-DAY | Somofilcon | Cooper vision | 2014 | 56 | 60 | Monofunctional siloxane macromer, difunctional siloxane | HEMA | Broad [ | |
| Avaira | Enfilcon | Cooper vision | 2011 | 46 | 100 | Difunctional fluorosiloxane | VMA | ||
| Ultra | Samfilcon A | Bausch & Lomb | 2014 | 46 | 114 | TRIS, Difunctional siloxane, monofunctional carbosiloxane macromer | Unknown | Awasti [ | |
| DAILIES TOTAL1 | Delfilcon A | Alcon | 2013 | 33 | 140 | Unknown | DMPC, DMA | ||
| MyDay | Stenfilcon A | Cooper vision | 2013 | 54 | 80 | Difunctional PEG-PDMS copolymer, monofunctional siloxane macromer | VMA | ||
| Acuvue Vita | Senfilcon C | JJVC | 2016 | 41 | 103 | SiGMA monomer, monofunctional siloxane macromer (MCR-M11) | DMA, HEMA, PVP |
* DMA—Dimethylacrylamide; DMPC—(1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine; HEMA—Hydroxyethylmethacrylate; NVP—N-Vinylpyrrolidone; PVP—Polyvinylpyrrolidone; SiGMA—3-(3-Methacryloxy-2-hydroxypropoxy)propylbis(trimethylsiloxy)methylsilane; TRIS—Methacryloxypropyltris(trimethylsiloxy)silane; VMA—N-Vinylmethylacetamide.
Figure 5Breathable films and packaging (Reprinted courtesy of Breathway Corp).
Figure 6Electroluminescent transparent quantum dot composites (Tao) [85]. Left: depiction of macromers (blue) modifying a CdSe QD (red) in a silicone matrix; Right: specimen of composite. (Reprinted with permission from Ref. [85] Copyright 2013 the Royal Society of Chemistry).
Scheme 9Urethane Polymer with Pendant Siloxane.
Scheme 10Urethane-Siloxane Soft Segment Block Polymer.
Comparing Contact Angle, Abrasion, and Friction in an IPDI-based Urethane.
| Control | A | B | C | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Description | Blend | Block Polymer | Pendant/Side-Chain | |
| Silicone Component | Silicone Fluid | Telechelic Carbinol | Dicarbinol Terminated Asymmetric Macromer | |
| Abrasion Test Failure, cycles | <100 | <100 | <100 | 4200 |
| Coefficient of Friction | 0.61 | 0.12 | 0.74 | 0.16 |
| Contact Angle, water before abrasion | 56° | 83° | 72° | 82° |
| Contact Angle, water after abrasion | 55° | 55° | 72° | 80° |
Control (no siloxane); (A) introduction of 50 cSt dimethylsiloxane fluid as a non-reactive additive; (B) telechelic siloxane MW 5000 (DMS-C21) added to form a soft-block copolymer; (C) macromer MW 5000 (MCR-C62) forming a brush polymer with siloxane pendant.
Scheme 11Vinyl functional Siloxane with PEG Endgroups-Reactive in Two-component Pt-Cure Silicone RTVs.
Scheme 12Vinyl functional Siloxane with Tetrahydrofurfuryloxy Endgroups-Reactive in Two-component Pt-Cure Silicone RTVs.
Figure 7Modification of silicone elastomers with symmetric silicone macromers. (a) Effect of comonomer on contact angle and hydrophobicity of silicone elastomer; (b) coefficient of friction of silicone elastomers modified with symmetric silicone macromers (Determined on AR-G2 Rheometer: aqueous, 37 °C, normal force 1N, velocity 1.0 rad/s (1.5 mm/s) and 1.0 rad/s (15 mm/s).)
Scheme 13CBD terminated PDMS macromer.
Figure 8PDMS macromer-modified SPIONs (Author’s work).
Figure 9Retinal repair utilizing macromer-enabled magnetorheological fluids.
Scheme 14Step-Growth Polymerization of Heterobifunctional α-Vinyl-ω-Hydride-terminated Silicone Macromer.
Figure 10Atomistic model of a 50,000 Da segment of ultra-high elongation elastomer suggesting 1–2 knots. (Author’s work).
Figure 11Mechanical properties of ultra-high elongation elastomer (ExSil 100) compared to conventional silicone elastomer.
Figure 12Pseudo-self-healing demonstration of bisected specimen of ExSil® (Author’s work).
Scheme 15Polystyrene-Polydimethylsiloxane Block Copolymer.
Figure 13PS-b-PDMS after a single imprint cycle and annealing provides 60 nm features (Reprinted with permission from Ref. [173] Copyright 2007 Wiley).
Figure 14Reconstruction of a volume containing a Double Gyroid of PS-b-PDMS (Reprinted with permission from Ref. [183] Copyright 2021 National Academy of Sciences).
Figure 15Color alteration from turquoise to dark blue during uniaxial stretching. (Reprinted with permission from Ref. [106] Copyright 2018 AAAS).
Figure 16Liquid Crystal-Phase Behavior of Polydiethylsiloxane.
Figure 17Bulk structures of PolyStyrene-Polydiethylsiloxane block copolymers. Bulk structures of (a) PS-b-PDES containing 37 wt% PS and (b) PS-b-PDES containing 43 wt% PS (Reprinted with permission from Ref. [19] Copyright 1998 Wiley).
Scheme 16Derivatization of AROP Siloxanes with mesogenic pendant groups.