Synthesis of Bio-Based Repairable Polyimines with Tailored Properties by Lignin Fractionation
Di Xie, Yunqiao Pu, Nathan Bryant, David P. Harper, Wei Wang, Arthur J. Ragauskas, Mi Li
Abstract
Developing sustainable polymers with low-value lignin remains a challenge. Herein, lignin-containing repairable polyimines were synthesized with tailored properties using lignin fractionation. First, softwood Kraft lignin is fractionated into a more homogeneous fraction with a lower molecular weight and a higher OH content. Next, Kraft lignin and its fraction are esterified by levulinic acid to introduce active ketone groups and subsequently condensed with oleylamine (OAm) and bis(3-aminopropyl)-terminated polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) via a catalyst-free Schiff-base reaction to form grafted lignin-OAm copolymers and cross-linked lignin-PDMS polymer networks (MKL-P and MFL-P), respectively. Results show that lignin-OAm polyimines can be self-repaired and hot reprocessed under pressure, while lignin-PDMS polyimines can be repaired with the assistance of a healing agent, heat, and pressure. Dynamic mechanical analyses demonstrate that the stress–relaxation behaviors of the polyimines follow the Arrhenius law under thermal-stress activation, indicating the occurrence of transimination. Moreover, compared with Kraft lignin, the lignin fraction ameliorates the grafting density of ketones and enhances the cross-linking density of lignin-PDMS polyimine networks. The higher cross-linking density of MFL-P leads to superior stress–relaxation activation energy, thermal stability, hydrophobicity, and light-shielding ability but inferior repairability and translucency. This work provides insights into the polymerization of lignin-based polymer networks and the potential application of lignin-PDMS polyimines for repairable, translucent, anti-UV, and hydrophobic coatings.