“…These metastable polymers must fulfill several technical criteria: i) displaying suitable performance as a substrate or encapsulant for microelectronic packaging, ii) undergoing environmentally triggered depolymerization that deactivates the electronics, and iii) allowing for tunable degradation kinetics. Among the metastable polymers reported to date, poly(phthalaldehyde) (PPA) is an ideal candidate for this application due to its low ceiling temperature ( T c = −43 °C), easy synthesis with various end‐groups, and its rapid depolymerization upon backbone bond cleavage . PPA has been used as an acid‐degradable photoresist, and its linear, end‐functionalized derivatives synthesized by anionic polymerization have been shown to depolymerize selectively in the presence of chemical triggers …”