Authors: Nellepalli P, Patel T, Oh JK
Polyurethane (PU) has not only been widely used in our daily lives, but also extensively explored as an important class of the essential polymers for various applications. In recent years significant efforts have been made on the development of self-healable PU materials that possess high performance, extended lifetime, great reliability, and recyclability. A promising approach is the incorporation of covalent dynamic bonds into the design of PU covalently-crosslinked polymers and thermoplastic elastomers that could dissociate and reform indefinitely in response to external stimuli or autonomously. This review summarizes various strategies to synthesize self-healable, reprocessable, and recyclable PU materials integrated with dynamic (reversible) Diels-Alder cycloadduct, disulfide, diselenide, imine, boronic ester, and hindered urea bond. Furthermore, various approaches utilizing the combination of dynamic covalent chemistries with nanofiller surface chemistries are described for the fabrication of dynamic heterogeneous PU composites. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Keywords: covalent adaptive networks; dynamic/reversible bonds; polyurethanes; reprocessability; self-healability;
PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34418209/