Chemical recycling of commodity and specialty polymers presents a multifaceted challenge for industrial societies. On one hand, macromolecular architectures must be engineered to yield durable products that, on the other hand, rapidly deconstruct to recyclable monomers under pre-determined conditions. Polymer deconstruction is a chemical process that requires deep understanding of molecular reactivity in heterogeneous media, where porous material architectures evolve in both space and time. To build this understanding, we develop herein experimental and analytical methods describing sets of diffusive eigenmodes that exist within time-varying, non-Euclidean boundary conditions, a situation commonly encountered in the reactive deconstruction of polymers where chain fragments splay, alter their local dynamics, and evolve in their confinement of reacting media. Diffusion power spectra, discerned experimentally by NMR, yield polymer and solvent frequency-domain velocity autocorrelation functions that are analyzed in the context of physical models for chemical reactions parameterized with fractal mathematics. The results connect local motion in polymers to chemical reactivity during acidolysis of circular elastomers.
Fricke, Sophia N., et al. "Diffusion power spectra as a window into dynamic materials architecture." Science Advances, vol. 11, no. 15, Apr. 2025. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adt6144
@article{osti_2566393,
author = {Fricke, Sophia N. and Salgado, Mia and Haber, Shira and Demarteau, Jeremy and Hua, Mutian and Song, Ah-Young and Helms, Brett A. and Reimer, Jeffrey A.},
title = {Diffusion power spectra as a window into dynamic materials architecture},
annote = {Chemical recycling of commodity and specialty polymers presents a multifaceted challenge for industrial societies. On one hand, macromolecular architectures must be engineered to yield durable products that, on the other hand, rapidly deconstruct to recyclable monomers under pre-determined conditions. Polymer deconstruction is a chemical process that requires deep understanding of molecular reactivity in heterogeneous media, where porous material architectures evolve in both space and time. To build this understanding, we develop herein experimental and analytical methods describing sets of diffusive eigenmodes that exist within time-varying, non-Euclidean boundary conditions, a situation commonly encountered in the reactive deconstruction of polymers where chain fragments splay, alter their local dynamics, and evolve in their confinement of reacting media. Diffusion power spectra, discerned experimentally by NMR, yield polymer and solvent frequency-domain velocity autocorrelation functions that are analyzed in the context of physical models for chemical reactions parameterized with fractal mathematics. The results connect local motion in polymers to chemical reactivity during acidolysis of circular elastomers.},
doi = {10.1126/sciadv.adt6144},
url = {https://www.osti.gov/biblio/2566393},
journal = {Science Advances},
issn = {ISSN 2375-2548},
number = {15},
volume = {11},
place = {United States},
publisher = {AAAS},
year = {2025},
month = {04}}
Proceedings of the 25th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (IEEE Cat. No.03CH37439)https://doi.org/10.1109/IEMBS.2003.1279902