4.8 Article

Vat Photopolymerization Additive Manufacturing of Tough, Fully Recyclable Thermosets

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 15, Issue 8, Pages 11111-11121

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.2c22081

Keywords

polymers; photopolymerization; additive manufacturing; recycling; dynamic chemistry

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In order to advance additive manufacturing capabilities, novel resin formulations are required to produce high-fidelity parts with desired mechanical properties that can be easily recycled. This study presents a thiol-ene-based system incorporating semicrystallinity and dynamic thioester bonds to create polymer networks. The materials show ultimate toughness values >16 MJ cm(-3), similar to high-performance literature precedents. The treatment of these networks with excess thiols allows for thiol-thioester exchange, degrading polymerized networks into functional oligomers that can be repolymerized into constructs with varying thermomechanical properties.
To advance the capabilities of additive manufacturing, novel resin formulations are needed that produce high-fidelity parts with desired mechanical properties that are also amenable to recycling. In this work, a thiol-ene-based system incorporating semicrystallinity and dynamic thioester bonds within polymer networks is presented. It is shown that these materials have ultimate toughness values >16 MJ cm(-3), comparable to high-performance literature precedents. Significantly, the treatment of these networks with excess thiols facilitates thiol-thioester exchange that degrades polymerized networks into functional oligomers. These oligomers are shown to be amenable to repolymerization into constructs with varying thermomechanical properties, including elastomeric networks that recover their shape fully from >100% strain. Using a commercial stereolithographic printer, these resin formulations are printed into functional objects including both stiff (E similar to 10-100 MPa) and soft (E similar to 1-10 MPa) lattice structures. Finally, it is shown that the incorporation of both dynamic chemistry and crystallinity further enables advancement in the properties and characteristics of printed parts, including attributes such as self-healing and shape-memory.

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