Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2024 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2024; Minneapolis & Virtual
Session Z30: Dynamics in Charged and Ion-Containing Polymers
11:30 AM–2:30 PM,
Friday, March 8, 2024
Room: 102AB
Sponsoring
Unit:
DPOLY
Chair: Benjamin Paren, Stevens Institute of Technology; Naresh Osti, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Abstract: Z30.00004 : Unreacted amine groups: indispensable keys to unlock imine bonds in dynamic networks*
1:18 PM–1:54 PM
Presenter:
Murillo Martins
(University of Tennessee - Knoxville)
Authors:
Murillo Martins
(University of Tennessee - Knoxville)
Peyton Carden
(University of Tennessee Knoxville)
Gaukhar Toleutay
(University of Tennessee)
Sirui Ge
(University of Illinois Urbana Champaign)
Bingrui Li
(University of Tennessee)
Alexei P Sokolov
(University of Tennessee)
Among the possible dynamic bonds, imine functionalities are promising candidates as they undergo rapid exchange and can be formed in the absence of catalysts with water as the only byproduct of the reaction. Imines are formed via condensation of primary amines with carbonyl compounds and can undergo hydrolysis, transamination, and metathesis reactions depending on the concentration of water and unreacted amines. While these mechanisms are well-established in chemistry and biology literature, the utilization of imine bonds as a dynamic moiety in long-chain polymers is recent. Hence, the crucial role of unreacted amines, even in residual amounts, as a mediator of metathesis exchange, is often overlooked in the design and description of these networks. Therefore, we seek to provide a mechanistic description of the dynamic and viscoelastic behavior of telechelic and pendant functionalized model systems based on polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) bearing imine bonds. We combine linear rheology and broadband dielectric spectroscopy to systematically show that in the absence of unreacted amines, network rearrangement based on imine exchange does not occur at temperatures reasonably lower than polymer degradation. Also, we show that the energy barrier of bond rearrangement is dictated by the concentration of cross-linkers in the system and not by the effective cross-link density.
*NSF Polymer program (DMR-1904657)
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