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Unusual photo-tunable mechanical transformation of azobenzene terminated aliphatic polycarbonate.
Chaoxian Chen1, Yufan Ji1, Haomin Li1
1School of Materials Science and Engineering, and Key Laboratory of Polymer Chemistry and Physics of Ministry of Education, Peking University, Beijing, China.
View abstract on PubMed
Researchers developed novel photoresponsive elastomers that change mechanical properties under UV light. This energy-driven material exhibits tunable elasticity and plasticity, offering potential for advanced applications like smart wound dressings.
Area of Science:
- Materials Science
- Polymer Chemistry
- Nanotechnology
Background:
- Smart-responsive materials are crucial for advanced applications, offering unique responsiveness and mechanical variability.
- Developing photoresponsive, energy-driven elastomers with these features presents significant challenges.
- Azobenzene-containing polymers are known for photo-triggered mechanical changes, but unique behaviors are sought.
Purpose of the Study:
- To fabricate physically-crosslinked elastomers based on aliphatic polycarbonate end-capped with azobenzene.
- To investigate the photoinduced mechanical transformation of these elastomers upon UV irradiation.
- To explore the potential of these materials as energy-driven elastomers with switchable mechanical properties.
Main Methods:
- Synthesis of aliphatic polycarbonate terminated with an azobenzene derivative.
Main Results:
- The aliphatic polycarbonate exhibited an unusual mechanical shift from elasticity to plasticity upon UV exposure.
- This transformation is attributed to stronger interactions between cis-azobenzene and polymer side chains, increasing crosslinking density.
- The material demonstrated photo-tunable mechanical properties with a cis-azobenzene half-life of 16.9 hours.
- Photoinduced mechanical changes occurred at room temperature, enabling non-thermally switchable adhesion.
Conclusions:
- Azobenzene-terminated aliphatic polycarbonate acts as an energy-driven elastomer with photo-switchable supramolecular interactions.
- The material displays tunable mechanical properties and room-temperature photoinduced mechanical changes.
- This offers potential for applications in smart adhesives and advanced wound healing dressings.


