Nitrogen-Coordinated
Boroxines Enable the Fabrication
of Mechanically Robust Supramolecular Thermosets Capable of Healing
and Recycling under Mild Conditions
The fabrication of
mechanically robust polymeric materials capable
of self-healing and recycling remains challenging because the mobility
of polymer chains in such polymers is very limited. In this work,
mechanically robust supramolecular thermosets capable of healing physical
damages and recycling under mild conditions are fabricated by trimerization
of bi-(ortho-aminomethyl-phenylboronic acid)- and
tri-(ortho-aminomethyl-phenylboronic acid)-terminated
poly(propylene glycol) oligomers (denoted as Bi-PBA-PPG and Tri-PBA-PPG,
respectively). The resultant supramolecular thermosets are cross-linked
by dynamic covalent bonds of nitrogen-coordinated boroxines. The mechanical
properties of the supramolecular thermosets can be systematically
tailored by varying the ratios between Tri-PBA-PPG and Bi-PBA-PPG,
which changes the cross-linking density of nitrogen-coordinated boroxines
and the topology of the supramolecular thermosets. The mechanically
strongest supramolecular thermosets with a molar ratio of Tri-PBA-PPG
to Bi-PBA-PPG being 1:2 have a glass transition temperature of ∼36
°C, a tensile strength of ∼31.96 MPa, and a Young’s
modulus of ∼298.5 MPa. The high reversibility of nitrogen-coordinated
boroxines and the flexibility of poly(propylene glycol) chains enable
the supramolecular thermosets with the strongest mechanical strength
to be highly efficiently healed at 55 °C and recycled under a
pressure of 4 MPa at 60 °C to regain their original mechanical
strength and integrity