Tailoring Dynamic Hydrogels by Controlling Associative Exchange Rates

07 February 2023, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Dithioalkylidenes are a recently-developed class of conjugate acceptors that undergo thiol exchange via an associative mechanism and have been used for reprocessable vitrimers, amine sensors, and degradable networks. Here, we show that the exchange rate of the reaction in aqueous environments is highly sensitive to the structure of the acceptor and may be varied over four orders of magnitude. Cyclic acceptors exchange rapidly, from 0.95 to 15.6 M-1s-1, while acyclic acceptors exchange between 3.77x10-3 and 2.17x10-2 M-1s-1. Computational, spectroscopic, and structural data suggest that the cyclic acceptors are more reactive than their linear counterparts because of resonance stabilization of the tetrahedral intermediate. We leverage this insight to design a compound with reactivity intermediate to that of the cyclic and linear analogs. Lastly, we incorporate this dynamic bond into hydrogels and demonstrate that molecular kex correlates with the hydrogels characteristic stress relaxation time; furthermore, these values may be parametrized with respect to computed descriptors of the electrophilic site. This work opens new avenues to design and control hydrogel viscoelasticity with an associative exchange mechanism.

Keywords

covalent adaptable networks
viscoelasticity
dynamic covalent chemistry

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
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Synthetic procedures, characterization data for new compounds, UV-vis spectra, kinetics data and details of model and fitting, rheological data, computed molecular descriptors (pdf)
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XYZ coordinates
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XYZ coordinates of calculated structures (xyz) Summary of calculated energies (xlsx)
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cif files
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CIF files for single-crystal X-ray data
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