Repairable 3D printable photopolymer resins based on low-activation-energy adaptable covalent bonding
Chongnan Ye, Kylian Janssen, Geraldine H. M. Schnelting, Vincent S. D. Voet, Rudy Folkersma, Katja Loos
Abstract
The rapid increase in the consumption of photoinitiated 3D printing materials requires sustainable and competitive new materials. This study demonstrated that covalently adaptable acrylate and methacrylate photopolymer-based resins can print objects with high resolution but maintain their repairability after printing by catalyzed transesterification reactions at high temperatures. A simple and elegant but high-yield approach was employed to effectively synthesize dihydroxypropyl methacrylate (DHPMA) monomers from glycidyl methacrylate. This resin is an ideal component in photoresin formulations for vitrimer 3D printing due to its low viscosity and high hydroxyl group content. Methacrylate phosphate (MAPs) and glycerol 1,3-diglycerolate diacrylate (GDGDA) were introduced as new transesterification catalyst and crosslinker, respectively. A series of methacrylate-based vitrimers with easily adjustable mechanical properties were developed using an appropriate design. 3D complex objects were obtained via bottom-up digital light processing (DLP) with feature sizes of approximately 50 μm. The low activation energy (Ea) of the covalent crosslinks results in an intensive bond exchange reaction at high temperature, which provides the printed structures with thermoactivated repairability up to 95 % of the initial strength following the first healing process. The developed materials offer a potential way for a closed-loop economy of plastic. • Repairable 3D-printable resins enable self-healing and reprocessing through dynamic covalent bonds. • Novel methacrylate resin achieves high-resolution printing and repairability for sustainable manufacturing. • DHPMA monomers and catalysts improve flexibility, repair efficiency, and dynamic crosslinking. • These resins support sustainable, recyclable 3D printing and a closed-loop plastic economy.