The remarkable elasticity and tensile strength found in natural elastomers are challenging to mimic. Synthetic elastomers typically feature covalently crosslinked networks (rubbers), but this hinders their reprocessability. Physical crosslinking via hydrogen bonding or ordered crystallite domains can afford reprocessable elastomers, but often at the cost of performance. Herein, we report the synthesis of ultra-tough, reprocessable elastomers based on linear alternating polymers. The incorporation of a rigid isohexide adjacent to urethane moieties affords elastomers with exceptional strain hardening, strain rate dependent behavior, and high optical clarity. Distinct differences were observed between isomannide and isosorbide-based elastomers...
International audienceElastomers are widely used because of their large-strain reversible deformabil...
A series of six low molecular weight elastomers with hydrogen bonding end-groups have been designed,...
Supramolecular materials are widely recognized among the most promising candidates for future genera...
Current synthetic elastomers suffer from the well-known trade-off between toughness and stiffness. B...
In most synthetic elastomers, changing the physical properties by monomer choice also results in a c...
Polyamides are one of the most important polymers. Long-chain aliphatic polyamides could bridge the ...
It is challenging to develop healable elastomers with combined high mechanical strength and good ela...
In most synthetic elastomers, changing the physical properties by monomer choice also results in a c...
Due to the multiple different properties in self-healing elastomers that are mutually exclusive base...
In order to investigate the effects of strong and well-defined hydrogen bonding on the properties of...
Polymer crystallinity is known to be dependent upon backbone stereochemistry, and this concept has e...
Sulfur or peroxide crosslinking is the most common and conventional method to develop elastomeric ma...
Elastomers are widely used because of their large-strain reversible deformability. Most unfilled ela...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of Chemical Engineering, 2011.Supramolecular polymer...
International audienceElastomers are widely used because of their large-strain reversible deformabil...
A series of six low molecular weight elastomers with hydrogen bonding end-groups have been designed,...
Supramolecular materials are widely recognized among the most promising candidates for future genera...
Current synthetic elastomers suffer from the well-known trade-off between toughness and stiffness. B...
In most synthetic elastomers, changing the physical properties by monomer choice also results in a c...
Polyamides are one of the most important polymers. Long-chain aliphatic polyamides could bridge the ...
It is challenging to develop healable elastomers with combined high mechanical strength and good ela...
In most synthetic elastomers, changing the physical properties by monomer choice also results in a c...
Due to the multiple different properties in self-healing elastomers that are mutually exclusive base...
In order to investigate the effects of strong and well-defined hydrogen bonding on the properties of...
Polymer crystallinity is known to be dependent upon backbone stereochemistry, and this concept has e...
Sulfur or peroxide crosslinking is the most common and conventional method to develop elastomeric ma...
Elastomers are widely used because of their large-strain reversible deformability. Most unfilled ela...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of Chemical Engineering, 2011.Supramolecular polymer...
International audienceElastomers are widely used because of their large-strain reversible deformabil...
A series of six low molecular weight elastomers with hydrogen bonding end-groups have been designed,...
Supramolecular materials are widely recognized among the most promising candidates for future genera...