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Water accelerated self-healing of hydrophobic copolymers

Engineering and Technology

Water accelerated self-healing of hydrophobic copolymers

D. Davydovich and M. W. Urban

This groundbreaking study conducted by Dmitriy Davydovich and Marek W. Urban explores how confined water molecules significantly enhance self-healing in hydrophobic acrylic-based copolymers. By disrupting van der Waals interactions, this research reveals impressive advancements in self-healing efficiency, proposing a fascinating concept that may extend to other self-healing mechanisms.... show more
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that copolymer compositions can significantly impact self-healing properties. This was accomplished by enhancement of van der Waals (vdW) forces which facilitate self-healing in relatively narrow copolymer compositional range. In this work we report the acceleration of self-healing in alternating/random hydrophobic acrylic-based copolymers in the presence of confined water molecules. Under these conditions competing vdW interactions do not allow H₂O-diester H-bonding, thus forcing nBA side groups to adapt L-shape conformations, generating stronger dipole-dipole interactions resulting in shorter inter-chain distances compared to 'key-and-lock' associations without water. The perturbation of vdW forces upon mechanical damage in the presence of controllable amount of confined water is energetically unfavorable leading the enhancement of self-healing efficiency of hydrophobic copolymers by a factor of three. The concept may be applicable to other self-healing mechanisms involving reversible covalent bonding, supramolecular chemistry, or polymers with phase-separated morphologies.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Nov 12, 2020
Authors
Dmitriy Davydovich, Marek W. Urban
Tags
self-healing
hydrophobic acrylic-based copolymers
confined water molecules
dipole-dipole interactions
van der Waals interactions
self-healing efficiency
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