The development of sustainable vitrimers from bio-based sources addresses the need for high-performance recyclable materials. This research describes eugenol-derived epoxy vitrimers cross-linked with adipic acid as a curing agent, focusing on comparative effects of caffeine and zinc acetate as transesterification catalysts at 5 and 10% concentrations versus a non-catalyzed control. Both catalysts acted as curing accelerators, confirmed by FTIR and DSC analyses, revealing polyhydroxyester network formation through associative ester exchange enabling topological reorganization. Zinc acetate at 10% proved most efficient, achieving the lowest apparent activation energy (116.0 kJ/mol), highest crosslinking density (νe = 3.42 × 10−3 mol/cm3), improved thermal stability with unimodal degradation profile, and substantially reduced topology freezing transition temperature (Tv = 132 °C), confirming enhanced dynamic properties. Caffeine demonstrated catalytic activity, reducing apparent activation energy to 124.4 kJ/mol at 10% and promoting rapid epoxide conversion during initial curing at moderate temperatures. Although its catalytic efficiency is moderate compared to zinc acetate, its bio-based origin and non-toxic nature make it a promising green alternative for sustainable vitrimer applications. Results demonstrate that catalyst selection is crucial for tailoring curing kinetics, network structure, and final vitrimeric properties, providing key guidelines for designing advanced circular materials from bio-based precursors.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Angela Yeissel Becerra-Lovera
Javier Mauricio Anaya-Mancipe
Rubén D. Díaz-Martín
Molecules
Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Universidade Católica de Brasília
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Becerra-Lovera et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a287b00a974eb0d3c039f2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules31050783