In this work, we propose the use
of regular branching of polyurethanes
as a way to regulate chain dynamics and govern crystallization in
highly dense hydrogen-bonded systems. As a result, robust and healable
polyurethanes can be obtained. To this end, we synthesized a range
of aliphatic propane diol derivatives with alkyl branches ranging
from butyl (C4) to octadecanyl (C18). The series of brush polyurethanes
was synthesized by polyaddition of the diols and hexamethylene diisocyanate.
Polyurethanes with very short (C < 4) and very long (C = 18) brush
lengths did not lead to any significant healing due to crystallization.
An intermediate amorphous regime appears for polymers with middle
branch lengths (C = 4 to 8) showing a fine control of material toughness.
For these systems, the side chain length regulates tube dilation,
and significant macroscopic healing of cut samples was observed and
studied in detail using melt rheology and tensile testing. Despite
the high healing degrees observed immediately after repair, it was
found that samples with medium to long length brushes lost their interfacial
strength at the healed site after being heated to the healing temperature
for some time after the optimal time to reach full healing. Dedicated
testing suggests that annealed samples, while keeping initial tackiness,
are not able to completely heal the cut interface. We attribute such
behavior to annealing-induced interfacial crystallization promoted
by the aliphatic branches. Interestingly, no such loss of healing
due to annealing was observed for samples synthesized with C4 and
C7 diols, which is identified as the optimal healing regime. These
results point at the positive effect of branching on healing, provided
that a critical chain length is not surpassed, as well as the need
to study healing behavior long after the optimal healing times.
The use of self-healing (SH) polymers to make 3D-printed polymeric parts offers the potential to increase the quality of 3D-printed parts and to increase their durability and damage tolerance due to their (on-demand) dynamic nature. Nevertheless, 3D-printing of such dynamic polymers is not a straightforward process due to their polymer architecture and rheological complexity and the limited quantities produced at lab-scale. This limits the exploration of the full potential of self-healing polymers. In this paper, we present the complete process for fused deposition modelling of a room temperature self-healing polyurethane. Starting from the synthesis and polymer slab manufacturing, we processed the polymer into a continuous filament and 3D printed parts. For the characterization of the 3D printed parts, we used a compression cut test, which proved useful when limited amount of material is available. The test was able to quasi-quantitatively assess both bulk and 3D printed samples and their self-healing behavior. The mechanical and healing behavior of the 3D printed self-healing polyurethane was highly similar to that of the bulk SH polymer. This indicates that the self-healing property of the polymer was retained even after multiple processing steps and printing. Compared to a commercial 3D-printing thermoplastic polyurethane, the self-healing polymer displayed a smaller mechanical dependency on the printing conditions with the added value of healing cuts at room temperature.
The interfacial work of deformation obtained by decovolution of the relaxation spectra acquired via macrorheology is linked and is able to predict interfacial healing in polyurethanes.
The effects of the
soft block fraction and H-bond state in thermoplastic
polyurethanes on autonomous entropy-driven scratch closure and barrier
restoration are studied. To this aim, comparable polyurethanes with
different segmentation states are applied as organic coatings on plain
carbon steel plates, scratched under very well-controlled conditions,
and the scratch closure and sealing kinetics are studied in detail.
The scratch closure is measured optically, while the barrier restoration
is probed by the accelerated cyclic electrochemical technique (ACET).
Scratch closure, attributed to entropic elastic recovery (EER), is
followed in a marked two-step process by barrier restoration governed
by local viscous flow and the state of the interfacial hydrogen bonding.
Polyurethanes with a lower soft phase fraction lead to a higher urea/urethane
ratio, which in turn influences the healing efficiency of each healing
step. Interestingly, softer polyurethanes leading to efficient crack
closure were unable to sufficiently restore barrier properties. The
present work highlights the critical role of the soft/hard block and
urea/urethane H-bond state content on crack closure and barrier restoration
of anticorrosive organic coatings and points at design rules for the
design of more efficient corrosion-protective self-healing polyurethanes.
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