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Network Polymer Properties Engineered Through Polymer Backbone Dispersity and Structure

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Specialty Chemistry
Date 2024 Mar 28
PMID 38546541
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Abstract

Dispersity (Ð or M/M) is an important parameter in material design and as such can significantly impact the properties of polymers. Here, polymer networks with independent control over the molecular weight and dispersity of the linear chains that form the material are developed. Using a RAFT polymerization approach, a library of polymers with dispersity ranging from 1.2-1.9 for backbone chain-length (DP) 100, and 1.4-3.1 for backbone chain-length 200 were developed and transformed to networks through post-polymerization crosslinking to form disulfide linkers. The tensile, swelling, and adhesive properties were explored, finding that both at DP 100 and DP 200 the swelling ratio, tensile strength, and extensibility were superior at intermediate dispersity (1.3-1.5 for DP 100 and 1.6-2.1 for DP 200) compared to materials with either substantially higher or lower dispersity. Furthermore, adhesive properties for materials with chains of intermediate dispersity at DP 200 revealed enhanced performance compared to the very low or high dispersity chains.

Citing Articles

Controlling primary chain dispersity in network polymers: elucidating the effect of dispersity on degradation.

Shimizu T, Whitfield R, Jones G, Raji I, Konkolewicz D, Truong N Chem Sci. 2023; 14(46):13419-13428.

PMID: 38033899 PMC: 10685271. DOI: 10.1039/d3sc05203f.