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Novel Monomer Design for Next-Generation Step-Growth Polymers

Facile monomer synthesis provided routes towards novel step-growth polymers for emerging applications. Adjustment of reaction conditions enabled green synthetic strategies, and promising scalability studies offered impetus for industrial funding. Engineering thermoplastics, such as linear polyetherimides (PEIs), had carefully targeted molecular weights for analysis of the effect of molecular weight and regiochemistry on the thermomechanical and rheological properties of PEIs. The design of linear, high performance PEIs comprising 3,3'- and 4,4'-bisphenol-A dianhydride (bis-DA) and m-phenylene diamine (mPD) provided an opportunity to elucidate the influence of dianhydride regiochemistry on thermomechanical and rheological properties. This unique pair of regioisomers allowed the tuning of the thermal and rheological properties for high glass transition temperature polyimides for engineering applications. The selection of the dianhydride regioisomer influenced the weight loss profile, entanglement molecular weight, glass transition temperature (Tg), tensile strain-at-break, zero-shear melt viscosity, average hole-size free volume, and the plateau modulus prior to viscous flow during dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA). The 3,3'-PEI composition interestingly exhibited a ~20 °C higher Tg than the corresponding 4,4'-PEI analog. Moreover, melt rheological analysis revealed a two-fold increase in Me for 3,3'-PEI, which pointed to the origin of the differences in mechanical and rheological properties as a function of PEI backbone geometry. The frequently studied 4,4'-PEI exhibited exceptional thermal, mechanical, and rheological properties, yet the 3,3'-PEI regioisomer lacked significant study in the industrial and academic sectors due to its 'inferior' properties, namely poor mechanical properties.
Introduction of long-chain branching (LCB) into PEIs provided a unique comparison between a commercially relevant PEI (Ultem® 1000) and a regioisomer infrequently found in the literature. Thermal stability remained consistent for each regioisomer, and Tgs for the 3,3'- and 4,4'-LCB-PEIs agreed well with prior literature. Rheological analysis demonstrated typical shear thinning and low-shear viscosity trends for LCB systems. The targeted molecular weights for the 3,3'-LCB-PEIs were well below the Me cutoff for "high molecular weight," and for this reason the rheological properties demonstrated inconsistent trends. Further study of PEIs led to the incorporation of ionic endgroups. These provided physical crosslinks, which enhanced mechanical and rheological properties of branched PEIs compared to their non-ionic analogs. The Tgs decreased with an increase in branching concentration for the phenyl-terminated PEI, while it remained unchanged for the ionically-endcapped PEIs. The divalent salts demonstrated higher mechanical strength and melt viscosities compared to the monovalent salt and the non-ionic PEIs. Interestingly, the zinc-endcapped PEI series exhibited decreased high-shear viscosities compared to the other PEIs, lending to promising industrial applications for the zinc-endcapped branched and linear PEIs for high temperature applications.
Additional engineering thermoplastics in the form of bio-based polyureas exhibited mechanical properties similar to those of non-bio-based polyureas. The isocyanate-free synthetic route incorporated an essential urea degradation mechanism at elevated temperatures to produce isocyanic acid, which then reacted with amines to produce linear polyurea thermoplastics. Urea provided a sustainable and bio-friendly reagent for high molecular weight, isocyanate-free polyureas. Poly(propylene glycol) triamine enabled the long-chain branching of thermoplastic polyureas. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) showed no change in Tg for the series; however, melting peaks decreased in intensity as the branching concentration increased, indicating a reduction in crystallinity. Tensile testing eluded to a decrease in ultimate stress values for higher branching concentrations, while melt rheology showed significant differences in melt viscosities. Viscosities increased markedly with an increase in branching concentration, signifying greater entanglement and stronger physical crosslinks for the branched polyureas.
Further analysis of possible isocyanate-free routes led to the use of 1,1'-carbonyldiimidazole (CDI) to generate polyureas and polyurethanes. CDI, known in the literature for its use in amidation and functionalization reactions, enabled the production of well-defined and stable polyurethane monomers. The functionalization of butanediol with CDI yielded an electrophilic biscarbamate monomer, bis-carbonylimidazolide (BCI), suitable for further step-growth polymerization in the presence of amines. The reaction of this novel monomer with aliphatic diamines produced thermoplastic polyurethanes with high thermal stability, tunable glass transition temperatures based on incorporation of flexible polyether segments, and creasable thin films. It is envisioned that CDI functionalized diols will afford access to various polymeric backbones without the use of toxic isocyanate-containing strategies. Additionally, non-isocyanate polyurethane (NIPU) foams were produced from BCI monomers without the need of blowing agents, catalysts, or solvents. These materials offered an alternative to existing foaming technology, which typically employed isocyanates. Polyurethanes were foamed through a CO2 thermal decomposition mechanism involving the BCI monomers. We investigated two series of polyurethane foams with a tunable Tg range from ~0 °C to ~110 °C. We found that the incorporation of aromatic amines vastly altered the foam thermomechanical properties, and the resulting foams were closed-cell in nature. / Doctor of Philosophy / Step-growth polymers play a significant role in commercial and industrial applications. On-going work in this field focuses on sustainability, biodegradability, and improved processability. This dissertation encompasses the improvement and innovation of current and novel engineering thermoplastics and foams. The careful purification and step-growth synthetic strategies herein, afforded targeted molecular weights for analysis of linear and long-chain branched (LCB) polyetherimides (PEIs). Further analysis of LCB-PEIs, with monovalent and divalent ionic endgroups, provided an opportunity to study the effect of ionic interactions and physical crosslinks at high temperatures (>300 °C). The long branches improved the melt processability compared to linear analogues at equivalent molecular weights. The challenge to investigate polyurethanes using non-isocyanate methodologies offered an opportunity to apply fundamental small-molecule, organic synthesis to macromolecular science. 1,1'-Carbonyldiimidazole (CDI) provided a platform to generate polymeric chains from industrially relevant monomers. Additional testing serendipitously discovered the generation of CO2 upon thermal degradation of the novel monomers. Harnessing the release of CO2, during the gelation of polyurethanes, provided an isocyanate-, catalyst-, and solvent-free synthetic route towards polyurethane foams that boasts scalability and industrial relevance.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/113090
Date16 July 2021
CreatorsWolfgang, Josh David
ContributorsChemistry, Long, Timothy E., Matson, John, Moore, Robert Bowen, Bortner, Michael J.
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation
FormatETD, application/pdf, application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document, application/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

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