Supporting Data for Block Copolymer Molecular Design to Address Practical Limitations to Recycling Polyolefin Blends

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2024-03-10
2024-12-25

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2025-01-25

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Ellison, Christopher J
cellison@umn.edu

Abstract

Plastics offer innumerable societal benefits but simultaneously contribute to persistent environmental pollution, dominated by polyethylene (PE) and isotactic polypropylene (iPP). Melt blending and reformulating post-consumer PE and iPP into useful materials presents a promising recycling approach. However, such repurposed plastics are generally mechanically inferior due to an inability to efficiently separate polyolefins in mixed waste streams; phase separation of PE and iPP results in brittleness as a consequence of poor interfacial strength. Recently we demonstrated that a small amount (1 wt%) of a poly(ethylene)-block-poly(ethyl ethylene-ran-ethylene)-block-poly(ethylene) (EXE) triblock copolymer, synthesized by low-cost anionic polymerization of 1,3-butadiene followed by solution hydrogenation, restores tensile toughness to levels equivalent to virgin polyolefins. Unfortunately, low-temperature solvent insolubility of EXE, driven by crystallization of the E blocks containing 1.5 ethyl branches per 100 backbone repeat units (EB), presents a challenge for industrial hydrogenation. Comparable toughness (ca. > 400% strain at break) was achieved in the present work with EB ranging from 1.5 to 6.5, accompanied by reduced EXE crystallinity and dissolution in cyclohexane down to room temperature at the highest EB content. This remarkable toughening behavior is attributed to a synergy between chain entanglements between the E end blocks and semicrystalline PE homopolymer and formation of E block “crystal nodules” that prevent chain pullout, along with topological constraints between the X loops and semicrystalline iPP. Our findings overcome barriers to commercial production of EXE with existing industrial facilities, providing a cost-effective strategy for recycling PE and iPP.

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The data folder contains all data of the figures in the article and SI appendix, including nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), size exclusion chromatography (SEC), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), stress-strain data, and small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). See the readme.txt file for further details.

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Cui, S.; Jeong, D.; Shi, Y.; Jahan, N.; Lodge, T. P.; Bates, F. S.; Ellison, C. J., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A., under revision

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This work was supported by Kraton Corporation and the National Science Foundation (grant DMR-2304179). Parts of this work were carried out in the Characterization Facility, University of Minnesota, which receives partial support from the NSF through the MRSEC (Award Number DMR-2011401) and the NNCI (Award Number ECCS-2025124) programs.

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Cui, Shuquan; Jeong, Daun; Shi, Yukai; Jahan, Nusrat; Lodge, Timothy P; Bates, Frank S; Ellison, Christopher J. (2025). Supporting Data for Block Copolymer Molecular Design to Address Practical Limitations to Recycling Polyolefin Blends. Retrieved from the Data Repository for the University of Minnesota (DRUM), https://doi.org/10.13020/xjea-k267.

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