4.5 Article

Maleimide-styrene-butadiene terpolymers: acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene inspired photopolymers for additive manufacturing

Journal

POLYMER INTERNATIONAL
Volume 71, Issue 7, Pages 856-866

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pi.6351

Keywords

photopolymer; maleimide; styrene; poly(butadiene) rubber; additive manufacturing; microstructure

Funding

  1. FWF [P27059]

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The transfer of ABS microstructure to photopolymers via a designed monomer system has been achieved, resulting in new materials with high toughness.
The terpolymer acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS) is a widely used thermoplastic material due to its excellent mechanical properties, especially high toughness. However, the monomer system of ABS cannot be feasibly photopolymerized due to its reactivity, opacity and monomer volatility. We show the transfer of an ABS microstructure to photopolymers via monomer systems designed to mimic ABS while remaining photopolymerizable. Acrylonitrile was substituted by more reactive and less volatile maleimides, of which the N substituent influences crosslinking considerably. Instead of styrene, less volatile derivatives were utilized as comonomers. Poly(butadiene) was introduced as cheap, readily available and non-volatile rubber. The resulting maleimide-styrene-poly(butadiene) networks exhibit varying microphase separations and simultaneous transparency. While optimized materials cannot quite exhibit the yield strain of hot-pressed ABS filament, their toughness partly exceeds that of ABS. Superior thermal stabilities and glass transition temperatures up to 190 degrees C were observed. Finally, stereolithographic printing of one tuned monomer system was conducted. (c) 2021 The Authors. Polymer International published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society of Industrial Chemistry.

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