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Covalently crosslinked diels-alder polymer networks.
Author(s) -
Christopher N. Bowman,
Brian J. Adzima,
Benjamin R. Anderson
Publication year - 2011
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1029765
Subject(s) - cycloaddition , covalent bond , polymer , click chemistry , dynamic covalent chemistry , chemistry , nanotechnology , materials science , combinatorial chemistry , catalysis , polymer science , polymer chemistry , molecule , organic chemistry , supramolecular chemistry
This project examines the utility of cycloaddition reactions for the synthesis of polymer networks. Cycloaddition reactions are desirable because they produce no unwanted side reactions or small molecules, allowing for the formation of high molecular weight species and glassy crosslinked networks. Both the Diels-Alder reaction and the copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) were studied. Accomplishments include externally triggered healing of a thermoreversible covalent network via self-limited hysteresis heating, the creation of Diels-Alder based photoresists, and the successful photochemical catalysis of CuAAC as an alternative to the use of ascorbic acid for the generation of Cu(I) in click reactions. An analysis of the results reveals that these new methods offer the promise of efficiently creating robust, high molecular weight species and delicate three dimensional structures that incorporate chemical functionality in the patterned material. This work was performed under a Strategic Partnerships LDRD during FY10 and FY11 as part of a Sandia National Laboratories/University of Colorado-Boulder Excellence in Science and Engineering Fellowship awarded to Brian J. Adzima, a graduate student at UC-Boulder. Benjamin J. Anderson (Org. 1833) was the Sandia National Laboratories point-of-contact for this fellowship

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