Published July 19, 2022 | Version v1
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Designing Stress-Adaptive Dense Suspensions Using Dynamic Covalent Chemistry

Description

The non-Newtonian behaviors of dense suspensions are central to their use in technological and industrial applications and arise from a network of particle–particle contacts that dynamically adapt to imposed shear. Reported herein are studies aimed at exploring how dynamic covalent chemistry between particles and the polymeric solvent can be used to tailor such stress-adaptive contact networks, leading to their unusual rheological behaviors. Specifically, a room temperature dynamic thia-Michael bond is employed to rationally tune the equilibrium constant (Keq) of the polymeric solvent to the particle interface. It is demonstrated that low Keq leads to shear thinning, while high Keq produces antithixotropy, a rare phenomenon where the viscosity increases with shearing time. It is proposed that an increase in Keq increases the polymer graft density at the particle surface and that antithixotropy primarily arises from partial debonding of the polymeric graft/solvent from the particle surface and the formation of polymer bridges between particles. Thus, the implementation of dynamic covalent chemistry provides a new molecular handle with which to tailor the macroscopic rheology of suspensions by introducing programmable time dependence. These studies open the door to energy-absorbing materials that not only sense mechanical inputs and adjust their dissipation as a function of time or shear rate but also can switch between these two modalities on demand.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1021/acs.macromol.2c00603
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:5555

Funding

US Department of Commerce
Center for Hierarchical Materials Design
Army Research Laboratory
W911NF-20-2-0044
Army Research Office
DURIP
National Science Foundation
Division of Materials Research
University of Chicago
Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division, Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering
Department(s)
Chemistry, Physics
Center(s) or Institute(s)
James Franck Institute