Design of photocurable thiol-epoxy resins for the processing of vitrimers with vat photopolymerisation 3D printing

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Design of photocurable thiol-epoxy resins for the processing of vitrimers with vat photopolymerisation 3D printing. / Gaca, Szymon; Dietliker, Kurt; Rossegger, Elisabeth et al.
In: Reactive and Functional Polymers, Vol. 205.2024, No. December, 106085, 30.10.2024.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

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Gaca S, Dietliker K, Rossegger E, Schlögl S. Design of photocurable thiol-epoxy resins for the processing of vitrimers with vat photopolymerisation 3D printing. Reactive and Functional Polymers. 2024 Oct 30;205.2024(December):106085. doi: 10.1016/j.reactfunctpolym.2024.106085

Author

Gaca, Szymon ; Dietliker, Kurt ; Rossegger, Elisabeth et al. / Design of photocurable thiol-epoxy resins for the processing of vitrimers with vat photopolymerisation 3D printing. In: Reactive and Functional Polymers. 2024 ; Vol. 205.2024, No. December.

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@article{d260c9ecb3e24ffeb8a37476da4c6385,
title = "Design of photocurable thiol-epoxy resins for the processing of vitrimers with vat photopolymerisation 3D printing",
abstract = "Vat photopolymerisation 3D printing is a convenient approach to fabricating complex polymeric objects based on the localised photocuring of a liquid resin. Advancing from free-radical mediated curing mechanisms, the current study focuses on the vat photopolymerisation 3D printing of photopolymers formed by an ionic click reaction between thiol and epoxy monomers. In this process, selected epoxy monomers are mixed with a tetra-functional thiol crosslinker and a photobase generator, which releases 1,5-diazabicyclo[4.3.0]non-5-ene (DBN) upon light exposure to initiate the anionic ring-opening reaction. FTIR, photo-DSC and rheology studies reveal a slow cure rate of the thiol-epoxy resins at room temperature, which is significantly accelerated by increasing the temperature to 50 °C during light irradiation. By optimising the resin composition, shelf life and viscosity, printing of objects via digital light processing 3D printing is enabled by using a vat heated to 50 °C. The printed thiol-epoxy networks contain ample -OH and ester moieties, which undergo thermo-activated bond exchange reactions. Here, the photochemically liberated DBN molecules act as catalysts to accelerate the transesterification reaction at elevated temperatures (150–180 °C). Rheological measurements demonstrate the efficient and Arrhenius-like behaviour of the networks' stress relaxation, giving rise to the dynamic nature of the printed photopolymers, which is further confirmed by reshaping experiments.",
keywords = "Anionic photocuring, Digital light processing 3D printing, Photobase generator, Thiol-epoxy resins, Vitrimers",
author = "Szymon Gaca and Kurt Dietliker and Elisabeth Rossegger and Sandra Schl{\"o}gl",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2024 The Authors",
year = "2024",
month = oct,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1016/j.reactfunctpolym.2024.106085",
language = "English",
volume = "205.2024",
journal = "Reactive and Functional Polymers",
issn = "1381-5148",
publisher = "Elsevier B.V.",
number = "December",

}

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Design of photocurable thiol-epoxy resins for the processing of vitrimers with vat photopolymerisation 3D printing

AU - Gaca, Szymon

AU - Dietliker, Kurt

AU - Rossegger, Elisabeth

AU - Schlögl, Sandra

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Authors

PY - 2024/10/30

Y1 - 2024/10/30

N2 - Vat photopolymerisation 3D printing is a convenient approach to fabricating complex polymeric objects based on the localised photocuring of a liquid resin. Advancing from free-radical mediated curing mechanisms, the current study focuses on the vat photopolymerisation 3D printing of photopolymers formed by an ionic click reaction between thiol and epoxy monomers. In this process, selected epoxy monomers are mixed with a tetra-functional thiol crosslinker and a photobase generator, which releases 1,5-diazabicyclo[4.3.0]non-5-ene (DBN) upon light exposure to initiate the anionic ring-opening reaction. FTIR, photo-DSC and rheology studies reveal a slow cure rate of the thiol-epoxy resins at room temperature, which is significantly accelerated by increasing the temperature to 50 °C during light irradiation. By optimising the resin composition, shelf life and viscosity, printing of objects via digital light processing 3D printing is enabled by using a vat heated to 50 °C. The printed thiol-epoxy networks contain ample -OH and ester moieties, which undergo thermo-activated bond exchange reactions. Here, the photochemically liberated DBN molecules act as catalysts to accelerate the transesterification reaction at elevated temperatures (150–180 °C). Rheological measurements demonstrate the efficient and Arrhenius-like behaviour of the networks' stress relaxation, giving rise to the dynamic nature of the printed photopolymers, which is further confirmed by reshaping experiments.

AB - Vat photopolymerisation 3D printing is a convenient approach to fabricating complex polymeric objects based on the localised photocuring of a liquid resin. Advancing from free-radical mediated curing mechanisms, the current study focuses on the vat photopolymerisation 3D printing of photopolymers formed by an ionic click reaction between thiol and epoxy monomers. In this process, selected epoxy monomers are mixed with a tetra-functional thiol crosslinker and a photobase generator, which releases 1,5-diazabicyclo[4.3.0]non-5-ene (DBN) upon light exposure to initiate the anionic ring-opening reaction. FTIR, photo-DSC and rheology studies reveal a slow cure rate of the thiol-epoxy resins at room temperature, which is significantly accelerated by increasing the temperature to 50 °C during light irradiation. By optimising the resin composition, shelf life and viscosity, printing of objects via digital light processing 3D printing is enabled by using a vat heated to 50 °C. The printed thiol-epoxy networks contain ample -OH and ester moieties, which undergo thermo-activated bond exchange reactions. Here, the photochemically liberated DBN molecules act as catalysts to accelerate the transesterification reaction at elevated temperatures (150–180 °C). Rheological measurements demonstrate the efficient and Arrhenius-like behaviour of the networks' stress relaxation, giving rise to the dynamic nature of the printed photopolymers, which is further confirmed by reshaping experiments.

KW - Anionic photocuring

KW - Digital light processing 3D printing

KW - Photobase generator

KW - Thiol-epoxy resins

KW - Vitrimers

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85208054548&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1016/j.reactfunctpolym.2024.106085

DO - 10.1016/j.reactfunctpolym.2024.106085

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85208054548

VL - 205.2024

JO - Reactive and Functional Polymers

JF - Reactive and Functional Polymers

SN - 1381-5148

IS - December

M1 - 106085

ER -