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Creators/Authors contains: "Kalow, Julia A."

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  1. Materials made from covalently cross-linked polymer networks are ubiquitous in everyday life but are difficult to process at the end of their life cycle. Therefore, it is essential to design materials with sustainability in mind to reduce the detrimental effects of plastic waste buildup. Functionalized triazines such as 1,3,5-triazine-2,4,6-triamine (melamine), hexamethylolmelamine (HMM), and hexakis(methoxymethyl)melamine (HMMM) are key components of robust thermosets, adhesives, and coatings. We combine HMM and HMMM with an alkoxysilane to produce transparent thermosets with remarkable glass adhesion. The dynamicity of silyl ether bonds in the network makes the materials susceptible to methanolysis, enabling the recovery of HMMM and the substrate. A combination of solution- and solid-phase techniques is used to elucidate both gelation and degradation pathways. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 23, 2025
  2. Multiple properties can be programmed into a single dynamic material by using heat 
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  3. Thioesters are an essential functional group in biosynthetic pathways, which has motivated their development as reactive handles in probes and peptide assembly. Thioester exchange is typically accelerated by catalysts or elevated pH. Here, we report the use of bifunctional aromatic thioesters as dynamic covalent cross-links in hydrogels, demonstrating that at physiologic pH in aqueous conditions, transthioesterification facilitates stress relaxation on the time scale of hundreds of seconds. We show that intramolecular hydrogen bonding is responsible for accelerated exchange, evident in both molecular kinetics and macromolecular stress relaxation. Drawing from concepts in the vitrimer literature, this system exemplifies how dynamic cross-links that exchange through an associative mechanism enable tunable stress relaxation without altering stiffness. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 3, 2025
  4. The transesterification rate of boronate esters with diols is tunable over 14 orders of magnitude. Rate acceleration is achieved by internal base catalysis, which lowers the barrier for proton transfer. Here we report a photoswitchable internal catalyst that tunes the rate of boronic ester/diol exchange over 4 orders of magnitude. We employed an acylhydrazone molecular photoswitch, which forms a thermally stable but photoreversible intramolecular H-bond, to gate the activity of the internal base catalyst in 8-quinoline boronic ester. The photoswitch is bidirectional and can be cycled repeatedly. The intramolecular H-bond is found to be essential to the design of this photoswitchable internal catalyst, as protonating the quinoline with external sources of acid has little effect on the exchange rate. 
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  5. Convenient strategies for the deconstruction and reprocessing of thermosets could improve the circularity of these materials, but most approaches developed to date do not involve established, high-performance engineering materials. Here, we show that bifunctional silyl ether, i.e., R′O–SiR2–OR′′, (BSE)-based comonomers generate covalent adaptable network analogues of the industrial thermoset polydicyclopentadiene (pDCPD) through a novel BSE exchange process facilitated by the low-cost food-safe catalyst octanoic acid. Experimental studies and density functional theory calculations suggest an exchange mechanism involving silyl ester intermediates with formation rates that strongly depend on the Si–R2 substituents. As a result, pDCPD thermosets manufactured with BSE comonomers display temperature- and time-dependent stress relaxation as a function of their substituents. Moreover, bulk remolding of pDCPD thermosets is enabled for the first time. Altogether, this work presents a new approach toward the installation of exchangeable bonds into commercial thermosets and establishes acid-catalyzed BSE exchange as a versatile addition to the toolbox of dynamic covalent chemistry. 
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