Abstract
Silicone elastomers are normally thermoset materials. While their inherent properties make them highly valuable, it would be of interest to develop stimuli-responsive silicones whose properties could be reversibly tuned at will. In the case of silicone polymers, a particularly interesting trigger is light, since silicone elastomers can readily be formulated to be transparent. We describe the utilization of coumarin-modified silicones for this purpose. On their own, the presence of coumarin groups converts silicone oils into thermoplastic elastomers through physical (noncovalent) cross-linking. UV-irradiation permits covalent cross-linking through [2 + 2] cycloadditions and is accompanied by loss of most physical cross-links. Higher energy photons permit, in part, photoinitiated retro-cycloaddition and a subsequent decrease in covalent cross-link density. It is thus possible to tailor the physical properties of the elastomer to increase and/or decrease the modulus of the elastomer using light and to conver...
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