JOURNAL ARTICLE

Fabrication of a Self-Healing, 3D Printable, and Reprocessable Biobased Elastomer

Saadman Sakib RahmanMuhammad ArshadAhmed Jawad QureshiAman Ullah

Year: 2020 Journal:   ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces Vol: 12 (46)Pages: 51927-51939   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

A novel self-healable, fully reprocessable, and inkjet three-dimensional (3D) printable partially biobased elastomer is reported in this work. A long-chain unsaturated diacrylate monomer was first synthesized from canola oil and then cross-linked with a partially oxidized silicon-based copolymer containing free thiol groups and disulfide bonds. The elastomer is fabricated through inkjet 3D printing utilizing the photoinitiated thiol-ene click chemistry and reprocessed by compression molding exploiting the dynamic nature of disulfide bond. Self-healing is enabled by phosphine-catalyzed disulfide metathesis. The elastomer displayed a tensile strength of ∼52 kPa, a breaking strain of ∼24, and ∼86% healing efficiency at 80 °C temperature after 8 h. Moreover, the elastomer showed excellent thermal stability, and the highest thermal degradation temperature was recorded to be ∼524 °C. After reprocessing through compression molding, the elastomer fully recovered its mechanical and thermal properties. These properties of the elastomer yield an ecofriendly alternative of fossil fuel-based elastomers that can find broad applications in soft robotics, flexible wearable devices, strain sensors, health care, and next-generation energy-harvesting and -storage devices.

Keywords:
Elastomer Materials science Compression molding Composite material Ultimate tensile strength Polymer Compression set Monomer Natural rubber

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58
Cited By
3.76
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
70
Refs
0.93
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Citation History

Topics

Advanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Polymer composites and self-healing
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Polymers and Plastics
Surface Modification and Superhydrophobicity
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Surfaces, Coatings and Films
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