High-performance lignin-mimetic polyesters

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Abstract

Liquid crystalline (LC) polymers were prepared by an in-bulk polycondensation of bioavaliable aromatic hydroxyl(carboxylic acid)s. p-Coumaric acid (4HCA) and its derivatives were selected as phytomonomers. The 4HCA homopolymer showed a thermotropic LC phase only in a state of low molecular weight. The copolymers of 4HCA with bile acids such as lithocholic acid (LCA) and cholic acid (CA) showed excellent cell compatibilities but low molecular weights. However, P(4HCA-co-CA)s allowed LC spinning to create molecularly oriented biofibers, presumably due to the chain entanglement that occurs during in-bulk chain propagation into hyperbranching architecture. P{4HCA-co-3,4- dihydroxycinnamic acid (DHCA)}s showed high molecular weight, high mechanical strength, high Young's modulus, and high softening temperature, which may be achieved through the entanglement by in-bulk formation of hyperbranching, rigid structures. P(4HCA-co-DHCA)s showed a smooth hydrolysis, in-soil degradation, and photo-tunable hydrolysis. Thus, P(4HCA-co-DHCA)s might be applied as an environmentally degradable plastic with extremely high performance.

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Kaneko, T., Kaneko, D., & Wang, S. (2010). High-performance lignin-mimetic polyesters. Plant Biotechnology. Japanese Society for Plant Cell and Molecular Biology. https://doi.org/10.5511/plantbiotechnology.27.243

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