TY - JOUR
T1 - Electroactive Self-Healing Shape Memory Polymer Composites Based on Diels–Alder Chemistry
AU - Orozco Gutierrez, Felipe
AU - Kaveh, Mahsa
AU - Santosa, Dian
AU - de Macedo Rooweder Lima, Guilherme
AU - Ribas Gomes, Diego
AU - Pei, Yutao T.
AU - Araya Hermosilla, Rodrigo
AU - Moreno-Villoslada, Ignacio
AU - Picchioni, Francesco
AU - Bose, Ranjita
PY - 2021/12/10
Y1 - 2021/12/10
N2 - Both shape memory and self-healing polymers have received significant attention from the materials science community. The former, for their application as actuators, self-deployable structures, and medical devices; and the latter, for extending the lifetime of polymeric products. Both effects can be stimulated by heat, which makes resistive heating a practical approach to trigger these effects. Here we show a conductive polyketone polymer and carbon nanotube composite with cross-links based on the thermo-reversible furan/maleimide Diels–Alder chemistry. This approach resulted in products with efficient electroactive shape memory effect, shape reprogrammability, and self-healing. They exhibit electroactive shape memory behavior with recovery ratios of about 0.9; requiring less than a minute for shape recovery; electroactive self-healing behavior able to repair microcracks and almost fully recover their mechanical properties; requiring a voltage in the order of tens of volts for both shape memory and self-healing effects. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of electroactive self-healing shape memory polymer composites that use covalent reversible Diels–Alder linkages, which yield robust solvent-resistant polymer networks without jeopardizing their reprocessability. These responsive polymers may be ideal for soft robotics and actuators. They are also a step toward sustainable materials by allowing an increased lifetime of use and reprocessability.
AB - Both shape memory and self-healing polymers have received significant attention from the materials science community. The former, for their application as actuators, self-deployable structures, and medical devices; and the latter, for extending the lifetime of polymeric products. Both effects can be stimulated by heat, which makes resistive heating a practical approach to trigger these effects. Here we show a conductive polyketone polymer and carbon nanotube composite with cross-links based on the thermo-reversible furan/maleimide Diels–Alder chemistry. This approach resulted in products with efficient electroactive shape memory effect, shape reprogrammability, and self-healing. They exhibit electroactive shape memory behavior with recovery ratios of about 0.9; requiring less than a minute for shape recovery; electroactive self-healing behavior able to repair microcracks and almost fully recover their mechanical properties; requiring a voltage in the order of tens of volts for both shape memory and self-healing effects. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of electroactive self-healing shape memory polymer composites that use covalent reversible Diels–Alder linkages, which yield robust solvent-resistant polymer networks without jeopardizing their reprocessability. These responsive polymers may be ideal for soft robotics and actuators. They are also a step toward sustainable materials by allowing an increased lifetime of use and reprocessability.
KW - Diels-Alder
KW - electroactive polymer
KW - polymer composites
KW - self-healing polymers
KW - shape memory
U2 - 10.1021/acsapm.1c00999
DO - 10.1021/acsapm.1c00999
M3 - Article
SN - 2637-6105
VL - 3
SP - 6147
EP - 6156
JO - ACS Applied Polymer Materials
JF - ACS Applied Polymer Materials
IS - 12
ER -