Open Access Article
Qi
Li†
*a,
Dong
Wang†
a,
Tianjiao
Wang
a,
Yang
Zhang
a,
Shiyang
Liu
b,
Shiwei
Zhang
a,
Zhufeng
Hu
a,
Liying
Li
a,
Guoyong
Wang
a and
Yingmin
Zhao
a
aAerospace Institute of Advanced Materials & Processing Technology, Beijing, 100074, China. E-mail: liqi032377@163.com
bChina International Engineering Consulting Corporation, Beijing, 100089, China
First published on 6th August 2025
The development of recyclable and self-repairable vitrimer materials featuring reversible B–O bonds has garnered increasing attention. However, their stability and thermomechanical properties remain insufficient for engineering applications in reusable carbon fiber-reinforced composites (CFRCs). Herein, we report a high-performance epoxy vitrimer containing boronic ester bond-based dynamic exchange networks, to which a small amount of N-donating imidazole has been added for introducing intermolecular N–B coordination interactions. The obtained vitrimer (E51-NBO-IMZ) possessed a high glass transition temperature (Tg) of 198 °C and tensile modulus of 3.71 GPa. Compared to the system without imidazole, it exhibited significantly improved solvent resistance due to the stabilization effect of N–B coordination on the B-center atoms. Moreover, stress relaxation tests also indicated a lower activation energy (Ea = 151.31 kJ mol−1) of the E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer, suggesting better dynamic exchange activity. Despite the high stability and improved thermomechanical properties, the self-repairing, recycling and degradation of the vitrimer and its CFRCs were successfully achieved under heating, stress or chemical environmental conditions, showing outstanding potential for practical applications.
In recent years, a diverse range of dynamic covalent reactions has been successfully applied in the design and fabrication of CAN-based epoxy vitrimers, such as transesterification,20–22 disulfide exchange,23,24 imine exchange,25–27 siloxane exchange,28–30 Diels–Alder reaction,31–33etc. Such dynamic chemical bonds can undergo reversible dissociation and reformation under external stimuli (e.g. high temperature, UV radiation, pressure, pH, and catalytic agents), thereby enabling self-healing and rearrangement of polymeric networks. However, the majority of epoxy vitrimers exhibit certain limitations: first, the initiation of some vitrimers requires the incorporation of large amounts of catalyst or use of very high temperature and pressure.34,35 Besides, the introduction of vulnerable dynamic structures usually leads to the weakening of thermal oxygen and chemical stability, as well as mechanical properties.36,37 These drawbacks have strongly affected the advancement and practical application of epoxy vitrimers. Consequently, it remains challenging to develop high performance epoxy vitrimers with enhanced mechanical properties, high stability and adequate dynamic capability.
Reversible B–O bonds, mainly synthesized through the dehydration condensation reaction between boronic acids and diols or the trimerization of boronic acids, are an emerging kind of dynamic bond in the construction of vitrimers.38–43 On account of the sensitive sp2 hybridized electron-deficient boron atoms, these bonds easily undergo reversible dissociation–association reactions without catalysts upon changing the chemical environment and temperature. To date, numerous efforts have been devoted to fabricate B–O bond-based vitrimers, yet most reported systems have been elastomers or low-modulus polymers for the consideration of fast exchange reactions.44–46 Recently, the use of boronic ester bonds to modify epoxy resins for the construction of high performance vitrimers has been a new research hot-spot. For instance, Zhang et al.47 reported an epoxy vitrimer based on a phenyl boric acid curing agent for green degradation, closed-loop recycling, and ready reprocessing, which exhibited good thermal and mechanical properties. Zeng et al.48 reported epoxy networks that were fabricated through the reaction between a thiol curing agent containing borate esters and a rosin-derivate containing an epoxide group. The epoxy networks displayed effective reprocessing properties with a high degree of recovering mechanical properties. Despite the significant progress in the preparation and dynamic exchange performance of epoxy vitrimers based on B–O bonds, their environmental degradation resistance, thermal resistance, and mechanical properties required further improvement. Moreover, their application in reusable CFRCs needed further verification.
Notably, a series of research studies have proved that the intra/intermolecular dative N–B interactions gave rise to a structural transformation of boron heterocycles from trigonal planar to tetrahedral, which enhanced the hydrolytic stability of the central boron atom.49–51 Thus, the formation of N–B coordination can be utilized to promote the stability of boronic ester linkages and confer improved mechanical properties of vitrimers. Li et al.52 reported the study of an epoxy resin reacting with a trifunctional amine containing an N–B coordinated boronic ester. Owing to the N–B coordinated structure, the dynamically cross-linked epoxy resin possessed good water and humidity resistance. Furthermore, the N–B coordination interaction was reported to be effective for accelerating the dynamics of the transesterification of boronic esters and beneficial for the self-healing performance.53,54 Song et al.55 reported the synergy between the boronic ester and N–B coordination to improve the mechanical properties and the self-healing efficiency in polyurethane vitrimers. In this work, the N–B coordination not only accelerated the reshuffling of the boronic ester at room temperature, but also dramatically enhanced the mechanical properties.
Herein, we represent an effective strategy for constructing high performance epoxy vitrimers by introducing borate ester-based cross-linking groups and intermolecular N–B coordination (Fig. 1). To achieve the fabrication of high-performance epoxy vitrimers, a diamine curing agent containing a pair of borate ester bonds (NBO) was designed and synthesized, and used for the cross-linking of a typical bisphenol A epoxy monomer (E51). In order to introduce the N–B coordination and stabilize the B–O dynamic covalent bonds, a minimal quantity of imidazole (IMZ) was added, which concurrently functioned as an N donor and cross-linking reaction accelerator. For comparative analysis, an epoxy vitrimer without imidazole (E51-NBO) was also prepared. Characterization results showed that the incorporation of imidazole not only promoted the cross-linking reaction and increased the glass transition temperature (Tg), but also significantly improved the solvent resistance. Surprisingly, despite the vitrimer with imidazole (E51-NBO-IMZ) exhibiting superior thermomechanical properties, the stress relaxation test indicated that its activation energy (Ea) was also lower, suggesting a better dynamic exchange activity at elevated temperatures. Taking advantage of the effective B–O bond-based cross-linking networks, we successfully prepared a high performance epoxy vitrimer and its carbon fiber-reinforced composites with excellent recyclability, degradability and self-repairing properties.
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42. The mixture then underwent thorough grinding and dispersion using a three-roll mill, and then the E51-NBO prepolymer was placed in a vacuum oven and heated to 60 °C under vacuum to eliminate air bubbles. Subsequently, the resin melt was poured into a mold and subjected to a curing process in the oven, following a curing protocol of 120 °C/1 h–150 °C/1 h–180 °C/1 h. Upon natural cooling, the resin-cast body of the E51-NBO vitrimer was obtained.
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1. After stirring at room temperature for 2 h, the solution was dried by rotary evaporation to obtain a uniform mixture of NBO-IMZ. The material ratio and preparation procedures of the E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer were consistent with those of the E51-NBO vitrimer.
The chemical structures and thermal and mechanical properties of the two vitrimers were characterized and analyzed comparatively. As shown in the FTIR spectra (Fig. 2a), the cured E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer and E51-NBO vitrimer exhibited similar chemical cross-linking structures. The amino groups in the NBO cross-linker underwent a ring-opening reaction with the epoxy groups in E51. Therefore, in the FTIR spectra of the vitrimers, the signals of the amino groups at 3433 cm−1 and 3359 cm−1 disappeared, as well as the signals of the epoxy groups at 910 cm−1, indicating the occurrence of effective cross-linking reactions. In addition, variable-temperature FTIR spectroscopy was applied to characterize the dynamic exchange properties of the vitrimers (Fig. S4). With an increase of temperature, the signals of B–O bonds at around 1305 cm−1 and 1430 cm−1 showed no obvious change of peak shape and intensity, indicative of a fast exchange process in the vitrimer. The fast exchange feature also contributed to excellent thermomechanical properties because of the maintenance of the cross-linked network density.
To verify the presence of the dative N–B interactions in the E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer, solid-state 11B NMR spectroscopy was carried out (Fig. 2b). The 11B NMR spectrum of NBO showed a single peak at around 20 ppm, which corresponded to the sp2 boron atoms in the boronic esters. In the equimolar mixture of NBO and IMZ, the majority of the 11B signals shifted to around 0.8 ppm, which was consistent with the sp3 boron atoms involving N–B coordination.56,57 The spectrum of the E51-NBO vitrimer was nearly the same as that of NBO, revealing a similar chemical environment of the boron centers in the vitrimer. In the spectrum of the E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer, a weak-signal peak at 1.0 ppm appeared, showing the N–B coordination in the vitrimer upon the addition of IMZ.
Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) analysis was utilized to characterize the residual reaction heat and curing degree. As shown in Fig. 2c, the DSC curve of the uncured resin showed a broad endothermic peak from 140 °C to 300 °C. After the curing reaction process, the endothermic peak of the vitrimers significantly decreased. What differs is that the endothermic peak of the E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer completely disappears, while the E51-NBO vitrimer retains a partial endothermic peak at around 250 °C. After post-curing treatment, an endothermic peak in the DSC curve of the E51-NBO vitrimer is still present (Fig. S5). Therefore, it was shown that the addition of the IMZ accelerator can help enhance the curing reaction activity and increase the cross-linking density, leading to better stability and thermomechanical properties.
Following the research on structural characteristics, the thermal properties of the E51-NBO vitrimer and E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer were measured. According to the DMA results (Fig. 2d), the E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer exhibited a glass transition temperature (Tg) of 198 °C, which was 30 °C higher than that of the E51-NBO vitrimer (168 °C). The much better thermomechanical properties were attributed to its high-strength cross-linked structure. Despite the significant difference in Tg, the thermogravimetric properties of the two vitrimers were essentially identical due to the same monomeric structures (Fig. S6).
Flexural and tensile tests were carried out to evaluate the mechanical performance of the two epoxy vitrimers (Fig. 2e and f). The flexural modulus and strength of the E51-NBO vitrimer were 3.54 GPa and 66.8 MPa, and the tensile modulus and strength were 3.71 GPa and 55.2 MPa. On account of the high rigidity, the E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer showed a higher flexural modulus (3.87 GPa) but a lower flexural strength (62.6 MPa). The tensile modulus of the E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer was almost the same as that of the E51-NBO vitrimer, yet the tensile strength was lower (50.0 MPa) due to the decreased elongation at break.
These test results demonstrated that the mechanical performance of such B–O bond-based epoxy vitrimer systems was comparable to that of engineering-grade epoxy resin materials, showing their excellent application potential.58
Based on the results of the stress relaxation experiments, the activation energy (Ea) can be calculated by fitting data according to the Arrhenius equation:59,60
τ(T) = τ0 exp(Ea/RT), | (1) |
The DMA frequency sweep experiments on the E51-NBO vitrimer and E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer were carried out at different temperatures to test their stability with respect to increasing frequencies. Taking into account the difference in Tg of the two vitrimers, the test temperatures of the E51-NBO vitrimer were 60 °C, 100 °C and 140 °C, while the test temperatures of the E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer were 80 °C, 120 °C and 160 °C. As shown in Fig. 3c and f, with the increase in temperature, the initial storage modulus (E′) of the two vitrimers decreased and the initial loss modulus (E′′) exhibited a slight elevation. At lower temperatures, as the scanning frequency increased, the E′ of the two vitrimers remained stable, while the E′′ sharply dropped to near 0 MPa when the frequency reached above 100 Hz. Compared with the E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer, the E′′ of the E51-NBO vitrimer began to decline at lower frequency (40 Hz). When the temperature approached to around the topological exchange temperature of these vitrimers, their E′ values gradually increased as the frequency increased, representing the suppression of molecular chain motions at high oscillation frequency and enhancement of the rigidity. Besides, the E′′ values of the two vitrimers exhibited higher stability at high temperatures. The above experimental results indicated that this kind of epoxy vitrimer had relative stability with respect to frequency, but sensitivity to temperature. Furthermore, the addition of imidazole had no significant effect on the frequency responsiveness of the vitrimers.
Furthermore, flexural tests at varying temperatures were applied to characterize the mechanical property variations of the E51-NBO and E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimers under elevated thermal conditions (Fig. S8). With the temperature increased from 25 °C to 180 °C, the modulus of the vitrimers decreased at an increasingly rapid rate. The modulus of the E51-NBO vitrimer experienced a sharp decline at 150 °C, while that of the E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer was at 180 °C. At above 180 °C, the modulus of the vitrimers declined to nearly zero, indicating that the deformation and dynamic exchange reactions could effectively occur at around 180 °C, which was the foundation for self-repairable and deformable performance under heating conditions.
To characterize their performance after the solvent resistance tests, DMA and flexural test samples of the E51-NBO and E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimers were prepared and placed in different solvents (EtOH, water, THF and DMF) for 24 hours. After that, the thermal and mechanical properties of the samples were measured. Due to the significant swelling of and degradation effect on the E51-NBO vitrimer in DMF, its samples in DMF did not qualify for testing. As shown in Fig. S10a and S10c, the heat resistance and mechanical properties of the E51-NBO vitrimer both decreased significantly after solvent immersion. Its initial storage modulus exhibited significant decrease and its Tg decreased from 168 °C to 164 °C (in EtOH), 152 °C (in water) and 137 °C (in THF), respectively. Meanwhile, its flexural strength and flexural modulus also decreased significantly, especially for the sample immersed in THF. The decline in the thermal and mechanical performance of the E51-NBO vitrimer was consistent with the results of its solvent resistance test. As for the E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer (Fig. S10b and S10d), the Tg, flexural strength and flexural modulus were all well maintained, which indicated the excellent solvent resistance performance of the B–O bond-based epoxy vitrimer after the addition of imidazole.
To verify the recyclability and processability of the E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer, the cured vitrimer was smashed into fine particles and underwent a reforming process through hot mould pressing at 180 °C and 5 MPa for 1 h. The second and third recycled samples were prepared via the same process. To evaluate the retention of mechanical properties of the vitrimer after recycling, the tensile properties of pristine and recycled vitrimer samples were tested. The stress–strain curves are shown in Fig. 5b, and the histograms of tensile strength and tensile modulus are shown in Fig. 5c. The E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer exhibited monotonously decreased tensile strength as the reprocessing cycles increased. The retention rate of tensile strength was 89% after the first recycling, which reduced to 76% after the third recycling. Nevertheless, there was no significant reduction in the tensile modulus of the original and reprocessed vitrimers. The reason the tensile strength decreased as the number of recycling times increased was that, on the one hand, during the re-molding process after smashing, microdefects or pores gradually accumulated inside the resin, making it prone to failure under load. On the other hand, the epoxy resin underwent a certain degree of aging after repeated hot-pressing. The effect of aging on the tensile strength was relatively significant, while its impact on the tensile modulus was not obvious. The high retention rate of the tensile modulus after multiple reprocessing cycles was mainly due to the fact that the cross-linking density and rigidity of the vitrimer did not change significantly after multiple curing processes, which indicated the efficient dynamic exchange and reconstruction of the borate ester bond networks that occurred during the recycling process.
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| Fig. 6 (a) Vacuum setup for the self-repairing experiment. (b–e) Characterization before and after the self-repair of the damaged E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer and composites. | ||
Besides, the self-repair performance of carbon fiber-reinforced vitrimer composites was also tested (Fig. 6d and e). Two kinds of composite specimens respectively with delamination and loose defects were intentionally fabricated, which represented two common types of imperfections encountered during composite manufacturing processes. Following the same self-repairing procedures, the two defective composite specimens exhibited effective self-repairing capabilities, accompanied by a slight reduction in thickness. In addition, the flexural properties of the CFRC samples before and after self-repairing were measured (Fig. S12). The flexural strength and modulus of the loose specimen were both significantly improved after self-repairing. For the delamination defective specimen, the flexural strength was enhanced more significantly. Thus, it is demonstrated that the CFRCs can achieve efficient self-repair of internal qualities and mechanical properties after rapid heating and vacuum treatments.
The above experiments showed that the E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer and its composites possessed efficient self-repairing properties at high temperatures and under appropriate pressure, showing application potential in the field of reusable fiber-reinforced composite components.
On this basis, a CFRC plate was prepared and immersed in the mixed solvent. The microscopic changes on the carbon fibers were characterized by SEM (Fig. 7c). After 24 hours, the edges of the composite plate softened and became partially delaminated, and the carbon fibers were exposed as the vitrimer on the surface was degraded and dissolved. After 48 hours, the carbon fiber fabric in the composite plate could be easily peeled off layer by layer, and the vitrimer between or inside the carbon fibers was also significantly degraded. Following the cleaning and drying treatments, the carbon fiber fabrics were completely recycled. Moreover, tensile tests and Raman spectroscopy were employed to evaluate the mechanical properties and structural quality of the recycled carbon fibers. As shown in Fig. 7d and e, the modulus and strength of the recycled carbon fiber and fabric were close to those of the original carbon fiber and fabric, but there was a slight decline under high loads. In conducting Raman spectroscopy (Fig. 7f), it was shown through spectra that the recycled carbon fiber exhibited consistent curves and peak intensities compared with those of the original carbon fiber. The ID/IG intensity ratio increased from 0.96 to 0.97, representing a very slight increase in carbon fiber defects.66,67 These phenomena indicated that the E51-NBO-IMZ vitrimer-based CFRCs could be recycled and maintain their mechanical properties and structural quality.
Supplementary information presents the structural characterization of NBO curing agent, the DSC, TG, creep curves, and flexural curves of vitrimers, the properties of vitrimers before and after solvent resistance testing and self-repair testing. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d5lp00144g.
Footnote |
| † These authors contributed equally to this work. |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2025 |