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Self-repairable materials strive to emulate curable and resilient biological tissue; however, their performance is currently insufficient for commercialization purposes because mending and toughening are mutually exclusive. Herein, we report a carbonate-type thermoplastic polyurethane elastomer that self-heals at 35 °C and exhibits a tensile strength of 43 MPa; this elastomer is as strong as the soles used in footwear. Distinctively, it has abundant carbonyl groups in soft-segments and is fully amorphous with negligible phase separation due to poor hard-segment stacking. It operates in dual mechano-responsive mode through a reversible disorder-to-order transition of its hydrogen-bonding array; it heals when static and toughens when dynamic. In static mode, non-crystalline hard segments promote the dynamic exchange of disordered carbonyl hydrogen-bonds for self-healing. The amorphous phase forms stiff crystals when stretched through a transition that orders inter-chain hydrogen bonding. The phase and strain fully return to the pre-stressed state after release to repeat the healing process.
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Youngho Eom
Seon‐Mi Kim
Minkyung Lee
Nature Communications
SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología
Catholic University of Korea
Korea University of Science and Technology
Korea Research Institute of Chemical Technology
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Eom et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d76019f44a16d01ef30ab5 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-20931-z