posted on 2024-03-12, 03:13authored byMiyeon Lee, Se Gyu Jang, Hyeonuk Yeo, Jong-Jin Park, Bongjin Moon, Nam-Ho You
The structural characteristics of the organic cross-linker
greatly
affect the potential infrared (IR) optics applications of sulfur polymers
synthesized through the inverse vulcanization reaction. Unlike elemental
sulfur, organic cross-linkers induce various absorptions in the IR
region and leave organic moieties that affect the IR transmittance,
even after inverse vulcanization. Most of the cyclic olefin cross-linkers
[e.g., dicyclopentadiene (DCPD)] investigated so far are expected
to produce side reactions and form byproducts during inverse vulcanization.
The side reactions caused by differences in reactivity between the
reaction sites can result in the deterioration of the optical properties
of sulfur polymers. In this study, thiol groups were introduced as
a cross-linker to effectively control the side reactions and byproducts
that may occur in inverse vulcanization. The sulfur and thiol cross-linkers
reacted rapidly and uniformly at all reaction sites to form sulfur
polymers without unwanted side reactions. Optical windows prepared
with the sulfur polymer exhibited enhanced IR transparency and achieved
thermal imaging of the human body in the long-wave IR (LWIR) region.
By design of a cross-linker for LWIR transparent sulfur polymers,
these results provide a useful solution for IR optics applications.