2022 Annual Meeting
(260c) Radical-Mediated Ring Opening Photopolymerization for Semi-Crystalline Thermoplastic Additive Manufacturing
Authors
Conventional approaches to SLA employ liquid resin formulations based on multifunctional (meth)acrylates and epoxides that afford cross-linked polymeric networks upon polymerization. Nevertheless, the utilization of resins that yield semi-crystalline thermoplastics provides facile access to physical and mechanical properties that are otherwise difficult to attain, such as high toughness and resistance to solvent swelling as well as additional post-fabrication processing options that can be used to extend the life cycle of 3D printed polymers. A major challenge associated with SLA employing semi-crystalline thermoplastic resins is poor inter-layer adhesion, resulting in mechanically-compromised printed parts. Here, we report the SLA-based additive manufacturing of semi-crystalline thermoplastics utilizing the radical-mediated ring-opening photopolymerization of cyclic allylic sulfides. Upon irradiation, resin formulations based on these cyclic monomers polymerize and subsequently crystallize rapidly, enabling fast print speeds. Propagation during the ring-opening polymerization proceeds via an addition-fragmentation reaction, conserving the allylic sulfide functional group which then provides a mechanism for inter-layer covalent connectivity by enabling further addition-fragmentation chain transfer between polymer chains in adjacent layers. Stereolithographic printing with cyclic allylic sulfide resin formulations thus yields semi-crystalline polymer parts that retain good mechanical properties compared with their bulk counterparts.