2 research outputs found

    Intrinsically re-curable photopolymers containing dynamic thiol-Michael bonds

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    [Image: see text] The development of photopolymers that can be depolymerized and subsequently re-cured using the same light stimulus presents a significant technical challenge. A bio-sourced terpenoid structure, l-carvone, inspired the creation of a re-curable photopolymer in which the orthogonal reactivity of an irreversible thioether and a dynamic thiol-Michael bond enables both photopolymerization and thermally driven depolymerization of mechanically robust polymer networks. The di-alkene containing l-carvone was partially reacted with a multi-arm thiol to generate a non-crosslinked telechelic photopolymer. Upon further UV exposure, the photopolymer crosslinked into a mechanically robust network featuring reversible Michael bonds at junction points that could be activated to revert, or depolymerize, the network into a viscous telechelic photopolymer. The regenerated photopolymer displayed intrinsic re-curability over two recycles while maintaining the desirable thermomechanical properties of a conventional network: insolubility, resistance to stress relaxation, and structural integrity up to 170 °C. Our findings present an on-demand, re-curable photopolymer platform based on a sustainable feedstock
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