Affiliation:
1. Key Laboratory of Bio‐Based Material Science & Technology (Ministry of Education) Northeast Forestry University Harbin Heilongjiang 150040 P. R. China
2. College of Materials Science and Engineering Central South University of Forestry and Technology Changsha Hunan 410004 P. R. China
3. Jiangsu Co‐Innovation Center of Efficient Processing and Utilization of Forest Resources International Innovation Center for Forest Chemicals and Materials College of Materials Science and Engineering Nanjing Forestry University Nanjing Jiangsu 210037 P. R. China
Abstract
AbstractIn cellulose‐based plastics, as a type of thermoplastic and thermosetting materials, the excellent balance of mechanical strength and ductility poses a large challenge. To tackle this problem, a novel approach is devised to introduce reversible non‐covalent ester cross‐linking into dynamic covalent hydrogen‐bonded polymer networks. However, the formation of ester bonds typically requires excess reactants and dehydrating agents, which is energy‐intensive, environmentally harmful, and costly. To address these concerns, inspired by polyester‐rich plant bark, a supramolecular composite material is developed. It can be dissolved and regenerated using a binary solvent system (choline hexanoate/choline chloride‐oxalic acid). In water, this supramolecular composite material underwent self‐healing and ester exchange reactions to form double‐cross‐linked networks, interfaced with photo‐thermal catalysis promoting the reaction due to its high photo‐thermal conversion efficiency (86.7%) and water evaporation rate (1.38 kg m−2 h−1). This enables the rapid and repeatable construction of durable and stretchable biomaterials. The mechanical properties of the supramolecular plastic can be adjusted by solar photo‐thermal conditions of the synthesis environment. These materials exhibit high performance in solar water evaporation and have self‐healing properties and are degradable, recyclable, and capable of eliminating their own adhesions.
Subject
Electrochemistry,Condensed Matter Physics,Biomaterials,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials
Cited by
4 articles.
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