Published October 29, 2025
| Version v1
Journal article
Depolymerization as a Design Strategy: Depolymerization Etching of Polymerization-Induced Microphase Separations
Creators
- 1. University of Florida
- 2. University of Delaware
- 3. University of Chicago
Description
Thermally triggered depolymerization has traditionally been viewed through the lens of sustainability and recycling, not as a constructive tool for materials design. Herein, we show that selective, thermally triggered depolymerization to gaseous monomer serves as a solvent-free strategy for generating porosity in nanostructured polymer materials, offering a means to bypass the mass transport limitations inherent in conventional solution-based etching. As a demonstration platform, we employed polymerization-induced microphase separation (PIMS) to generate disordered bicontinuous block copolymer structures with embedded depolymerizable domains. By incorporating a methacrylate block susceptible to thermal depolymerization within a cross-linked, depolymerization-resistant styrenic matrix, we developed a process we term depolymerization etching of polymerization-induced microphase separations (DEPIMS). This approach enables highly selective and efficient domain removal via reversion to monomer to produce mesoporous materials with high surface areas (>200 m2/g). Subsequent surface functionalization yielded mesoporous adsorbents with tunable uptake kinetics and among the highest dye adsorption capacities reported for PIMS-derived materials, demonstrating the adaptability of the DEPIMS platform for chemical separations. DEPIMS can also be extended to a gram-scale, one-pot approach to yield mesoporous materials with recoverable monomer in under 12 h. These findings reposition thermal depolymerization from a sustainability tool to a broadly enabling strategy for scalable, on-demand fabrication of functional nanostructured materials.
Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1021/acscentsci.5c01313
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:16558
Funding
- United States Army Research Office
- W911NF2310260
- Office of Basic Energy Sciences
- DE-SC0021166
- Division of Materials Research
- DMR-2404144