posted on 2025-04-04, 05:43authored byKwangwook Ko, Edgar B. Mejia, Hayden E. Fowler, Suong T. Nguyen, Yasmeen AlFaraj, Yuyan Wang, Samuel C. Leguizamon, Nancy R. Sottos, Jeremiah A. Johnson
Thermosets are used in numerous industrial applications
due to
their excellent stabilities and mechanical properties; however, their
covalently cross-linked structures limit chemical circularity. Cleavable
comonomers (CCs) offer a practical strategy to impart new end-of-life
opportunities, such as deconstructability or remoldability, to thermosets
without altering critical properties, cost, or manufacturing workflows.
Nevertheless, CC-enabled recycling of thermosets has so far been limited
to one cycle with a 25% recycled content. Here, we introduce a “fragment
reactivation” strategy, wherein the oligomeric fragments obtained
from CC-enabled thermoset deconstruction are activated with functional
groups that improve fragment solubility and reactivity for subsequent
rounds of recycling. Using polydicyclopentadiene (pDCPD), an industrial
hydrocarbon thermoset material, containing low loadings of a siloxane-based
CC, we first demonstrate two rounds of chemical recycling by incorporating
40 wt % norbornene silyl ether-reactivated fragments derived from
the prior generation’s deconstruction. Then, we show that the
two-step sequence of deconstruction and reactivation can be unified
into a single-step process, referred to as “deconstructive
reactivation.” Using this approach, we demonstrate three rounds
of chemical recycling with 40–45 wt % fragments incorporated
per cycle while maintaining key material properties and deconstructability.
These three generations of recycling effectively extend the lifespan
of deconstructable pDCPD thermosets by ∼2.6 times. Combined
with CCs, fragment reactivation presents a promising and potentially
generalizable strategy to improve the chemical recycling efficiency
of thermosets.