Dynamic nucleophilic exchange of quaternary anilinium salts has been incorporated into rehealable and malleable polymeric materials that can be activated under mild (60 °C) thermal stimulus. The mechanism of dynamic exchange between quaternary anilinium salt and free aniline was assessed in small-molecule model experiments. The dynamic exchange was found to be dissociative in nature, due to the indirect S N 2 mechanism, where initially the bromide anion attacks the anilinium salt to generate an alkyl bromide which undergoes subsequent attack by a free aniline group. A quaternary anilinium-based cross-linker was synthesized to act as dynamic linkages in the polymer network. Cross-linked polymeric materials showed thermoresponsive rehealing and malleability properties at 60 °C along with being resistant to irreversible creep under ambient conditions. The use of anilinium salts enables dynamic exchange to occur with significantly milder thermal stimulus than other comparable materials, while maintaining mechanical stability.
The kinetics and mechanism of the thermally activated dynamic covalent exchange of thiol-Michael adducts is investigated. A model system of thiol-Michael adducts between thiophenol and phenylvinylketone derivatives and adducts between 2-mercaptoethanol phenylvinylketone derivatives in N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) at elevated temperatures is used to probe the underlying exchange mechanism. The kinetic data show negligible free Michael acceptor, which is consistent with the highly efficient thiol-Michael reaction being a "click"-like reaction that significantly favors the adduct form. At elevated temperatures of 90 °C in DMF the thiol-Michael adducts reach equilibrium after 24 h, although equilibration did not occur within 24 h at 60 °C or 75 °C, and negligible exchange occurs under ambient conditions. A kinetic model was developed to describe the dynamic covalent exchange and equilibration. The experimental and simulation kinetic data of dynamic covalent exchange are consistent with the thiol-Michael adducts undergoing a retro-Michael reaction, followed by subsequent addition of a free thiol to the liberated Michael acceptor. Kinetic analysis is consistent with the fragmentation, or retro-Michael reaction, being the rate-determining step in the dynamic covalent exchange. This suggests that the key step in dynamic covalent exchange is not enhanced by addition of free thiol or free Michael acceptor, since the addition reaction is much faster than the retro-Michael reaction. This fundamental study will guide the design of organic compounds, materials, and bioconjugates that utilize the thermally activated dynamic covalent thiol-Michael linkages.
Synthesis of precision polymers crosslinked with dynamic thiol-Michael adducts is developed, and the materials are characterized to determine structure–property relationships.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.