posted on 2025-04-10, 10:44authored bySirui Ge, Christopher M. Evans
Compared with permanent covalent bonds, dynamic bonds
allow for
the rearrangement and processability of polymer networks through the
bond exchange. In recent years, the study of vitrimers has received
much attention including self-healing, adhesion, and recyclability
of polymeric materials. However, the understanding of how the underlying
polymer segmental dynamics impact the bond exchange process both near
and far from the glass transition remains a knowledge gap. Acrylic
imine vitrimers with different glass-transition temperatures but the
same dynamic cross-linker were investigated to understand the effect
of segmental motion on dynamic bond exchange. The dynamic cross-linker
was then varied in terms of length and flexibility to understand how
the chemistry of the cross-linkers affects the segmental and bond
exchange dynamics, characterized by oscillatory shear rheology and
dielectric spectroscopy. Two theoretical models originally describing
the dynamics of associative bond exchange in polymers with the same
mathematical expression were applied to the present vitrimers. The
theoretical frameworks agree well with experimental results and provide
a method to quantify the role of bond exchange activation energy,
kinetics, as well as an overall contribution of both cross-linker
diffusion and the local unbinding on bulk relaxation. This work provides
insights into how different aspects of vitrimer design will lead to
their macroscopic dynamic properties.