Digital Light Processing to Afford High Resolution and Degradable CO2‐Derived Copolymer Elastomers

Author:

Poon Kam C.1ORCID,Segal Maddison2ORCID,Bahnick Alexander J.3ORCID,Chan Yin Mei3ORCID,Gao Chang1ORCID,Becker Matthew L.234ORCID,Williams Charlotte K.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry Chemistry Research Laboratory University of Oxford 12 Mansfield Road Oxford OX1 3TA U.K.

2. Thomas Lord Department of Mechanical Engineering & Materials Science Duke University Durham NC 27708 USA

3. Department of Chemistry Duke University Durham NC 27708 USA

4. Departments of Biomedical Engineering and Orthopaedic Surgery Duke University Durham NC 27708 USA

Abstract

AbstractVat photopolymerization 3D printing has proven very successful for the rapid additive manufacturing (AM) of polymeric parts at high resolution. However, the range of materials that can be printed and their resulting properties remains narrow. Herein, we report the successful AM of a series of poly(carbonate‐b‐ester‐b‐carbonate) elastomers, derived from carbon dioxide and bio‐derived ϵ‐decalactone. By employing a highly active and selective Co(II)Mg(II) polymerization catalyst, an ABA triblock copolymer (Mn=6.3 kg mol−1, ÐM=1.26) was synthesized, formulated into resins which were 3D printed using digital light processing (DLP) and a thiol‐ene‐based crosslinking system. A series of elastomeric and degradable thermosets were produced, with varying thiol cross‐linker length and poly(ethylene glycol) content, to produce complex triply periodic geometries at high resolution. Thermomechanical characterization of the materials reveals printing‐induced microphase separation and tunable hydrophilicity. These findings highlight how utilizing DLP can produce sustainable materials from low molar mass polyols quickly and at high resolution. The 3D printing of these functional materials may help to expedite the production of sustainable plastics and elastomers with potential to replace conventional petrochemical‐based options.

Funder

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Research England

Oxford Martin School, University of Oxford

Faraday Institution

Foundation for the National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

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