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11 Nov 02:41

A Simply Synthesized, Tough Polyarylene with Transient Mechanochromic Response

by Fabian Kempe, Oliver Brügner, Hannah Buchheit, Sarah Noemi Momm, Felix Riehle, Sophie Hameury, Michael Walter, Michael Sommer

Abstract

A simple and high-yielding route to tough polyarylenes of the type poly(meta,meta,para-phenylene) (PmmpP) is developed. PmmpP is tough even in its as-synthesized state which has an intermediate molar mass of Mw≈60 kg mol−1 and exhibits outstanding mechanical properties at further optimized molecular weight of Mw=96 kg mol−1, E=0.9 GPa, ϵ=300 %. Statistical copolymers with para,para-spiropyran (SP) are mechanochromic, and the toughness allows mechanochromism to be investigated. Strained samples instantaneously lose color upon force release. DFT calculations show this phenomenon to be caused by the PmmpP matrix that allows build-up of sufficiently large forces to be transduced to SP, and the relatively unstable corresponding merocyanine (MC) form arising from the aromatic co-monomer. MC units covalently incorporated into PmmpP show a drastically reduced half life time of 3.1 s compared to 4.5 h obtained for SP derivatives with common 6-nitro substitution.

Thumbnail image of graphical abstract

Pimp my polymer: A simple and high-yielding synthesis gives high molecular weight, tough poly(meta,meta,para-phenylene) (PmmpP). Statistical copolymers of PmmpP with para,para-spiropyran are mechanochromic under positive uniaxial strain, but lose color instantaneously after force release.

22 Sep 10:46

The origins of high hardening and low ductility in magnesium

by Zhaoxuan Wu

Magnesium is a lightweight structural metal but it exhibits low ductility—connected with unusual, mechanistically unexplained, dislocation and plasticity phenomena—which makes it difficult to form and use in energy-saving lightweight structures. We employ long-time molecular dynamics simulations utilizing a density-functional-theory-validated interatomic potential, and reveal the fundamental origins of the previously unexplained phenomena. Here we show that the key 〈c + a〉 dislocation (where 〈c + a〉 indicates the magnitude and direction of slip) is metastable on easy-glide pyramidal II planes; we find that it undergoes a thermally activated, stress-dependent transition to one of three lower-energy, basal-dissociated immobile dislocation structures, which cannot contribute to plastic straining and that serve as strong obstacles to the motion of all other dislocations. This transition is intrinsic to magnesium, driven by reduction in dislocation energy and predicted to occur at very high frequency at room temperature, thus eliminating all major dislocation slip systems able to contribute to c-axis strain and leading to the high hardening and low ductility of magnesium. Enhanced ductility can thus be achieved by increasing the time and temperature at which the transition from the easy-glide metastable dislocation to the immobile basal-dissociated structures occurs. Our results provide the underlying insights needed to guide the design of ductile magnesium alloys.

Nature doi: 10.1038/nature15364

16 Jan 04:58

A robust platform for functional microgels via thiol-ene chemistry with reactive polyether-based nanoparticles

Polym. Chem., 2015, 6,2029-2037
DOI: 10.1039/C4PY01766H, Paper
Carolin Fleischmann, Jeffrey Gopez, Pontus Lundberg, Helmut Ritter, Kato L. Killops, Craig J. Hawker, Daniel Klinger
Network functionalization of reactive precursor nanoparticles enables the facile preparation of degradable microgels that are responsive to different triggers but equal in morphology.
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