Understanding, predicting, and tuning the fragility of vitrimeric polymers
Simone Ciarella, Rutger A. Biezemans, Liesbeth M. C. Janssen

TL;DR
This study combines simulations and Mode-Coupling Theory to elucidate how microstructural properties influence the fragility of vitrimeric polymers, revealing tunable fragility and underlying structural mechanisms.
Contribution
It demonstrates that vitrimer fragility can be widely tuned via density adjustments and explains the microstructural origins of fragility changes using first-principles MCT.
Findings
Fragility varies from fragile to superstrong with density changes.
MCT accurately reproduces the fragility phenomenology.
Microstructural shifts from repulsive to attractive interactions drive fragility crossover.
Abstract
Fragility is an empirical property that describes how abruptly a glass-forming material solidifies upon supercooling. The degree of fragility carries important implications for the functionality and processability of a material, as well as for our fundamental understanding of the glass transition. However, the microstructural properties underlying fragility still remain poorly understood. Here, we explain the microstructure-fragility link in vitrimeric networks, a novel type of high-performance polymers with unique bond-swapping functionality and unusual glass-forming behavior. Our results are gained from coarse-grained computer simulations and first-principles Mode-Coupling Theory (MCT) of star-polymer vitrimers. We first demonstrate that the vitrimer fragility can be tuned over an unprecedentedly broad range, from fragile to strong and even superstrong behavior, by decreasing the bulk…
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