Abstract

Molecular substitutions were used to demonstrate preferential control over the kinetic rate constants in a poly(ethylene glycol)-based hydrogel with two different reversible thia-conjugate addition reactions. A strong electron-withdrawing nitrile group on the conjugate acceptor showed a 20-fold increase in the forward rate constant over a neutral withdrawing group, whereas the reverse rate constant only increased 6-fold. Rheometry experiments demonstrated that the hydrogel plateau modulus was primarily dictated by reaction equilibrium, whereas the stress relaxation characteristics of the hydrogel were dominated by the reverse rate constant. Furthermore, dynamic crosslinking allowed the hydrogel to rapidly and spontaneously self-heal. These results indicate that decoupling the kinetic rate constants of bond exchange allow systematic control over dynamic covalent hydrogel bulk properties, such as their adaptability, stress relaxation ability, and self-healing properties.

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