In recent decades, more than 100 different mechanophores with a broad range of activation forces have been developed. For various applications of mechanophores in polymer materials, it is crucial to selectively activate the mechanophores with high efficiency, avoiding nonspecific bond scission of the material. In this study, we embedded cyclobutane-based mechanophore cross-linkers (I and II) with varied activation forces (fa) in the first network of the double network hydrogels and quantitively investigated the activation selectivity and efficiency of these mechanophores. Our findings revealed that cross-linker I, with a lower activation force relative to the bonds in the polymer main chain (fa-I/fa-chain = 0.8 nN/3.4 nN), achieved efficient activation with 100% selectivity. Conversely, an increase of the activation force of mechanophore II (fa-II/fa-chain = 2.5 nN/3.4 nN) led to a significant decrease of its activation efficiency, accompanied by a substantial number of nonspecific bond scission events. Furthermore, with the coexistence of two cross-linkers, significantly different activation forces resulted in the almost complete suppression of the higher-force one (i.e., I and III, fa-I/fa-III = 0.8 nN/3.4 nN), while similar activation forces led to simultaneous activations with moderate efficiencies (i.e., I and IV, fa-I/fa-IV = 0.8 nN/1.6 nN). These findings provide insights into the prevention of nonspecific bond rupture during mechanophore activation and enhance our understanding of the damage mechanism within polymer networks when using mechanophores as detectors. Besides, it establishes a principle for combining different mechanophores to design multiple mechanoresponsive functional materials.
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Covalent Mechanochemistry and Contemporary Polymer Network Chemistry: A Marriage in the Making
Over the past 20 years, the field of polymer mechanochemistry has amassed a toolbox of mechanophores that translate mechanical energy into a variety of functional responses ranging from color change to small-molecule release. These productive chemical changes typically occur at the length scale of a few covalent bonds (Å) but require large energy inputs and strains on the micro-to-macro scale in order to achieve even low levels of mechanophore activation. The minimal activation hinders the translation of the available chemical responses into materials and device applications. The mechanophore activation challenge inspires core questions at yet another length scale of chemical control, namely: What are the molecular-scale features of a polymeric material that determine the extent of mechanophore activation? Further, how do we marry advances in the chemistry of polymer networks with the chemistry of mechanophores to create stress-responsive materials that are well suited for an intended application? In this Perspective, we speculate as to the potential match between covalent polymer mechanochemistry and recent advances in polymer network chemistry, specifically, topologically controlled networks and the hierarchical material responses enabled by multi-network architectures and mechanically interlocked polymers. Both fundamental and applied opportunities unique to the union of these two fields are discussed.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2116298
- PAR ID:
- 10390778
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of the American Chemical Society
- ISSN:
- 0002-7863
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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Polymer mechanochemistry offers attractive opportunities for using macroscopic forces to drive molecular-scale chemical transformations, but achieving efficient activation in bulk polymeric materials has remained challenging. Understanding how the structure and topology of polymer networks impact molecular-scale force distributions is critical for addressing this problem. Here we show that in block copolymer elastomers the molecular-scale force distributions and mechanochemical activation yields are strongly impacted by the molecular weight distribution of the polymers. We prepare bidisperse triblock copolymer elastomers with spiropyran mechanophores placed in either the short chains, the long chains, or both and show that the overall mechanochemical activation of the materials is dominated by the short chains. Molecular dynamics simulations reveal that this preferential activation occurs because pinning of the ends of the elastically effective midblocks to the glassy/rubbery interface forces early extension of the short chains. These results suggest that microphase segregation and network strand dispersity play a critical role in determining molecular-scale force distributions and suggest that selective placement of mechanophores in microphase-segregated polymers is a promising design strategy for efficient mechanochemical activation in bulk materials.more » « less
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