Understanding the Topology Freezing Temperature of Vitrimer-Like Materials through Complementary Structural and Rheological Analyses for Phase-Separated Network
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Vitrimers are sustainable cross-linked polymers characterized by an associative bond exchange mechanism within their network. A well-known feature of vitrimers is the Arrhenius dependence of the viscosity or relaxation time. Another important aspect is the existence of a topology-freezing temperature (Tv), which represents a transition between the viscoelastic solid state and the malleable viscoelastic liquid state. Various methods, including viscosity-temperature plots and temperature-ramp creep (or dilatometry), have been proposed for determining the Tv. In this study, we complementarily employ X-ray scattering-based structural analysis and rheological analysis to assign Tv in phase-separated vitrimer-like materials undergoing trans-N-alkylation bond exchange. Note that the trans-N-alkylation progresses via the dissociative bond exchange pathway, whereas our previous studies demonstrated that the temperature-dependence of relaxation time followed the Arrhenius dependence, which was the reason for the classification as a vitrimer-like material. Specifically, we identify Tv as the temperature at which an anomalous increase in domain distance occurs during the rubbery state in the structural analysis. In the rheological analysis, Tv corresponds to the transition temperature marking the shift from the Williams–Landel–Ferry dependence to the Arrhenius dependence in the shift factors used to create master curves for frequency sweep rheology data. Importantly, both methods yield nearly the same Tv, validating the accuracy of the proposed assignment and, thus, providing valuable insights into the specific properties of vitrimers.
期刊介绍:
ACS Macro Letters publishes research in all areas of contemporary soft matter science in which macromolecules play a key role, including nanotechnology, self-assembly, supramolecular chemistry, biomaterials, energy generation and storage, and renewable/sustainable materials. Submissions to ACS Macro Letters should justify clearly the rapid disclosure of the key elements of the study. The scope of the journal includes high-impact research of broad interest in all areas of polymer science and engineering, including cross-disciplinary research that interfaces with polymer science.
With the launch of ACS Macro Letters, all Communications that were formerly published in Macromolecules and Biomacromolecules will be published as Letters in ACS Macro Letters.