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The Importance of Bulk Viscoelastic Properties in "Self-Healing" of Acrylate-Based Copolymer Materials.


ABSTRACT: "Self-healing" has emerged as a concept to increase the functional stability and durability of polymer materials in applications and thus to benefit the sustainability of polymer-based technologies. Recently, van der Waals (vdW)-driven "self-healing" of sequence-controlled acrylate-based copolymers due to "key-and-lock"- or "ring-and-lock"-type interactions has generated considerable interest as a viable route toward engineering polymers with "self-healing" ability. This contribution systematically evaluates the time, temperature, and composition dependence of the mechanical recovery of acrylate-based copolymer and homopolymer systems subject to cut-and-adhere testing. "Self-healing" in n-butyl acrylate/methyl methacrylate (BA/MMA)- or n-butyl acrylate/styrene (BA/Sty)-based copolymers with varying composition and sequence is found to correlate with the bulk viscoelastic properties of materials and to follow a similar trend as other tested acrylate-based homo- and copolymers. This suggests that "self-healing" in this class of materials is more related to the chain dynamics of bulk materials rather than composition- or sequence-dependent specific interactions.

SUBMITTER: Zhao Y 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10795469 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The Importance of Bulk Viscoelastic Properties in "Self-Healing" of Acrylate-Based Copolymer Materials.

Zhao Yuqi Y   Wu Hanshu H   Yin Rongguan R   Matyjaszewski Krzysztof K   Bockstaller Michael R MR  

ACS macro letters 20231211 1


"Self-healing" has emerged as a concept to increase the functional stability and durability of polymer materials in applications and thus to benefit the sustainability of polymer-based technologies. Recently, van der Waals (vdW)-driven "self-healing" of sequence-controlled acrylate-based copolymers due to "key-and-lock"- or "ring-and-lock"-type interactions has generated considerable interest as a viable route toward engineering polymers with "self-healing" ability. This contribution systematica  ...[more]

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