Abstract

In this work, a novel type of polyester urethane urea (PEUU) foam is introduced. The foam was produced by reactive foaming using a mixture of poly(1,10–decamethylene adipate) diol and poly(1,4–butylene adipate) diol, 4,4′-diphenylmethane diisocyanate, 1,4–butanediol, diethanolamine and water as blowing agent. As determined by differential scanning calorimetry, the melting of the ester-based phases occurred at temperatures in between 25 °C and 61 °C, while the crystallization transition spread from 48 °C to 20 °C. The mechanical properties of the foam were simulated with the hyperplastic models Neo-Hookean and Ogden, whereby the latter showed a better agreement with the experimental data as evidenced by a Pearson correlation coefficient R² above 0.99. Once thermomechanically treated, the foam exhibited a maximum actuation of 13.7% in heating-cooling cycles under a constant external load. In turn, thermal cycling under load-free conditions resulted in an actuation of more than 10%. Good thermal insulation properties were demonstrated by thermal conductivities of 0.039 W·(m·K)−1 in the pristine state and 0.052 W·(m·K)−1 in a state after compression by 50%, respectively. Finally, three demonstrators were developed, which closed an aperture or opened it again simply by changing the temperature. The self-sufficient material behavior is particularly promising in the construction industry, where programmable air slots offer the prospect of a dynamic insulation system for an adaptive building envelope.

Highlights

  • Shape memory polymers (SMPs) are stimuli-responsive materials. [1,2,3,4,5] Once thermomechanically treated, they maintain a temporary shape until the shape memory effect (SME) is triggered

  • We report here on the development of a novel polyester urethane urea (PEUU) foam with two-way shape memory properties and its application potential in the building industry

  • Two polyester diols which were later used as building blocks for the PEUU foam were synthesized employing a titanium-(IV)-catalyzed polycondensation reaction

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Summary

Introduction

Shape memory polymers (SMPs) are stimuli-responsive materials. [1,2,3,4,5] Once thermomechanically treated (programmed), they maintain a temporary shape until the shape memory effect (SME) is triggered. Shape memory polymers (SMPs) are stimuli-responsive materials. [1,2,3,4,5] Once thermomechanically treated (programmed), they maintain a temporary shape until the shape memory effect (SME) is triggered. The activation of the so-called one-way shape memory effect (1W SME) results in the almost complete recovery of the original shape. The molecular network architecture supports the advantageous thermomechanical behavior of SMPs. Molecular chains and cross-linking points, whose nature can be physical or chemical, define the structure. Physically cross-linked, phase segregated block copolymers like poly(ester urethanes) (PEUs) belong to the most promising SMP families [9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18].

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