Eugenol-Based
Siloxane-Containing Recyclable Epoxy
Resins with Tunable Dynamic Properties, Reprocessability, and Degradability
Posted on 2024-11-08 - 11:13
Developing recyclable and biobased thermosetting polymers
is of
great significance for environmental protection and resource recycling.
In this work, three liquid eugenol-based siloxane-containing epoxides
(ESI1–3) with different rigid side groups and functionalities
were synthesized and cured by anhydride or amine hardeners. The epoxy
resins cured by the anhydride hardener (ESI-M) show quite different
dynamic properties, reprocessability, and degradability compared to
those cured by the amine hardener (ESI-H). Bifunctional epoxides (ESI1
and ESI2) cured with anhydrides exhibit significantly faster stress
relaxation at lower temperatures compared to those cured with amines.
All the cured resins can be reprocessed by hot pressing due to their
dynamic structures. Both the ESI1-M and ESI2-M resins almost fully
restore their mechanical properties after reprocessing. However, the
ESI1-H and ESI2-H resins exhibit poor reprocessability even when pressed
at high temperature. All cured ESI resins degrade rapidly in a tetrabutylammonium
fluoride trihydrate/tetrahydrofuran solution, but they exhibit distinctly
different degradation behaviors in acidic solutions. Notably, the
degraded ESI-H resins in HCl solution can be recycled to prepare new
epoxy resins, whose tensile strengths are comparable to those of the
original resins. Finally, recyclable carbon fiber reinforced composites
and electromagnetic wave absorbing coatings were fabricated based
on the ESI2-M resin. Carbon fibers and magnetite powders can be quickly
and nondestructively recycled through degrading the ESI2-M resin.