Moderated ionic bonding for water-free recyclable polyelectrolyte complex materials

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Abstract

While nature extensively uses electrostatic bonding between oppositely charged polymers to assemble and stabilize materials, harnessing these interactions in synthetic systems has been challenging. Synthetic materials cross-linked with a high density of ionic bonds, such as polyelectrolyte complexes, only function properly when their charge interactions are attenuated in the presence of ample amounts of water; dehydrating these materials creates such strong Coulombic bonding that they become brittle, non-thermoplastic, and virtually impossible to process. We present a strategy to intrinsically moderate the electrostatic bond strengths in apolar polymeric solids by the covalent grafting of attenuator spacers to the charge carrying moieties. This produces a class of polyelectrolyte materials that have a charge density of 100%, are processable and malleable without requiring water, are highly solvent- and water-resistant, and are fully recyclable. These materials, which we coin “compleximers,” marry the properties of thermoplastics and thermosets using tailored ionic bonding alone.

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APA

van Lange, S. G. M., te Brake, D. W., Portale, G., Palanisamy, A., Sprakel, J., & van der Gucht, J. (2024). Moderated ionic bonding for water-free recyclable polyelectrolyte complex materials. Science Advances, 10(2). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adi3606

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