Plant oil-derived vitrimers-graphene composites with self-healing ability triggered by multiple stimuli

Yun Hu, Puyou Jia, Meghan E. Lamm, Ye Sha, Leman Buzoglu Kurnaz, Yufeng Ma, Yonghong Zhou

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

29 Scopus citations

Abstract

Bio-based polymer materials with multi-stimuli responsiveness and multichannel self-healing ability have received significant attention due to their increasing impact on intelligent device. In this study, we report a direct construction of bio-based epoxy vitrimer (EV) from green, renewable precursors including soybean oil and tung oil that could offer new opportunities for constructions of novel polymer network intrinsically containing favorable features such as multi-stimuli response and multichannel self-healing ability, repeatable processing and recycling. Epoxidized soybean oil (ESO) and tung maleic anhydride (TMA) was used to produce a full plant oil-based EV. Tensile strengths of EVs significantly increased from 1.27 MPa to 3.7 MPa, which was due to the formation of multiple H-bonds and increased crosslink density. EVs with micropores or cracks cut achieved self-healing after heating at 200 °C in oven after 60 min. A practicable strategy for fabricating full plant oil based EV composites using graphene was developed to produce multifunctional vitrimers with self-healing ability triggered by multiple stimuli. The electricity, heat, electromagnetic wave and IR light triggered self-healing of EV composite with graphene were achieved.

Original languageEnglish
Article number110704
JournalComposites Part B: Engineering
Volume259
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 15 2023
Externally publishedYes

Funding

Puyou Jia acknowledged the support by Fundamental Research Funds from Jiangsu Province Biomass and Materials Laboratory ( JSBEM-S-202311 ) and the Fundamental Research Funds of CAF ( CAFYBB2022XB001 ).

Keywords

  • Bio-epoxy vitrimer
  • Multiple stimuli
  • Plant oil
  • Self-healing ability

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