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Vitrimers

Vitrimers are a class of plastics, which are derived from thermosetting polymers (thermosets) and are very similar to them. Vitrimers consist of molecular, covalent networks, which can change their topology by thermally activated bond-exchange reactions. At high temperatures they can flow like viscoelastic liquids, at low temperatures the bond-exchange reactions are immeasurably slow (frozen) and the Vitrimers behave like classical thermosets at this point. Vitrimers are strong glass formers. Their behavior opens new possibilities in the application of thermosets like self-healing or simple processibility in a wide temperature range. Vitrimers are a class of plastics, which are derived from thermosetting polymers (thermosets) and are very similar to them. Vitrimers consist of molecular, covalent networks, which can change their topology by thermally activated bond-exchange reactions. At high temperatures they can flow like viscoelastic liquids, at low temperatures the bond-exchange reactions are immeasurably slow (frozen) and the Vitrimers behave like classical thermosets at this point. Vitrimers are strong glass formers. Their behavior opens new possibilities in the application of thermosets like self-healing or simple processibility in a wide temperature range. Besides epoxy resins based on diglycidyl ether of bisphenol A, other polymer networks have been used to produce vitrimers, such as polylactic acid (polylactide), polyhydroxyurethanes, epoxidized soybean oil with citric acid and polybutadiene.

[ "Catalysis", "Epoxy", "Thermosetting polymer", "Covalent bond", "Polymer" ]
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