American Chemical Society
Browse

An Extremely Stretchable and Self-Healable Supramolecular Polymer Network

Download (2.64 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2021-01-12, 15:03 authored by Huan Zhang, Shijia Yang, Zhusheng Yang, Dong Wang, Juanjuan Han, Cuihua Li, Caizhen Zhu, Jian Xu, Ning Zhao
The construction of a single polymer network with extreme stretchability, relatively high mechanical strength, and fast and facile autonomous room-temperature self-healing capability still remains a challenge. Herein, supramolecular polymer networks are fabricated by synergistically incorporating metal–ligand and hydrogen bonds in poly­(propylene glycol) (PPG). The representative specimen, PPG-Im-MDA-1.5-0.25-Cu, shows a combination of notable mechanical properties involving an extreme stretching ratio of 346 ± 14× and a Young’s modulus of 2.10 ± 0.14 MPa, which are superior to the previously reported extremely stretchable polymeric materials. Notably, the destroyed specimen can fully recover mechanical performances within 1 h. The tunability of mechanical properties and self-healing capability has been actualized by merely tailoring the content of a chain extender. The application of the as-prepared supramolecular PPG network in constructing a flexible and self-healable conductor has been demonstrated. This strategy provides some insights for preparing extremely stretchable and self-healable polymeric materials.

History