| Literature DB >> 35518413 |
Jinyun Wang1, Shubin Chen1, Tengfei Lin1, Jinhuang Ke1, Tianxiang Chen1, Xiao Wu1, Cong Lin1.
Abstract
Vitrimers, as intriguing polymers, possess exchangeable links in the crosslinking networks, endowing them with the abilities of recycling and reprocessing. However, most of vitrimers are generally fabricated via complex synthesis and polymerization processes. Toxic and unstable exogenous catalysts are inevitably applied to activate the exchange reaction to rearrange the crosslinking networks. These drawbacks limit the widespread applications of vitrimers. Moreover, most reported vitrimers could only partially maintain or severely deteriorate their mechanical properties after recycling. Herein, to solve the above-mentioned problems, for the first time, a catalyst-free and recycle-reinforcing elastomer vitrimer is revealed. By the reactive blending of commercially available epoxidized natural rubber and carboxylated nitrile rubber, the elastomer vitrimer associated with exchangeable β-hydroxyl ester bonds was obtained. Strikingly, the vitrimer exhibits an exceptional recycle-reinforcing property. This work provides a feasible method to fabricate elastomer vitrimers, which promotes the recycling of crosslinking commercial available elastomers. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 35518413 PMCID: PMC9057420 DOI: 10.1039/d0ra07728c
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1(a) Demonstration of the self-crosslinking behaviour in XNBR/ENR elastomers. (b) Schematic of the topological structure rearrangement based on the β-hydroxyl ester exchange reaction.
Fig. 2Photographs of XNBR-50s. (a) Original sample. (b) First recycled sample. (c) Second recycled sample. (d) Third recycled sample.
Fig. 3(a) Stress–strain curves of the original and recycled XNBR-50s. (b) Curves of σ* versus λ−1 of the original and recycled XNBR-50s.
Fig. 4Schematic illustrating of the recycle-reinforcing phenomenon of XNBR-50.
Fig. 5(a) Cyclic strain/recovery curves of XNBR-50 at 25 °C and 160 °C. (b) Temperature dependence of storage modulus curves, and (c) tan δ curves of XNBR-50s. (d) TGA curves of XNBR-50s.
Fig. 6Dissipating energy dependence of samples before and after recycling. ΔW = W1 − W2.