Glass transition temperature as a unified parameter to design self-healable elastomers

Self-healing ability of materials, particularly polymers, improves their functional stabilities and lifespan. To date, the designs for self-healable polymers have relied on specific intermolecular interactions or chemistries. This article reports a design methodology for self-healable polymers based on glass transition. Statistical copolymer series of two monomers with different glass transition temperatures (Tg) were synthesized, and their self-healing tendency depends on the Tg of the copolymers and the constituents. Self-healing occurs more efficiently when the difference in Tg between two monomer units is larger, within a narrow Tg range of the copolymers, irrespective of their functional groups. The self-healable copolymers are elastomeric and nonpolar. The strategy to graft glass transition onto self-healing would expand the scope of polymer design.

Please find the full open-access article published on Science under the below link:

https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adp0729