Organic–inorganic covalent–ionic molecules for elastic ceramic plastic
Weifeng Fang,
Zhao Mu,
Yan He,
Kangren Kong,
Kai Jiang,
Ruikang Tang () and
Zhaoming Liu ()
Additional contact information
Weifeng Fang: Zhejiang University
Zhao Mu: Zhejiang University
Yan He: Zhejiang University
Kangren Kong: Zhejiang University
Kai Jiang: East China Normal University
Ruikang Tang: Zhejiang University
Zhaoming Liu: Zhejiang University
Nature, 2023, vol. 619, issue 7969, 293-299
Abstract:
Abstract Although organic–inorganic hybrid materials have played indispensable roles as mechanical1–4, optical5,6, electronic7,8 and biomedical materials9–11, isolated organic–inorganic hybrid molecules (at present limited to covalent compounds12,13) are seldom used to prepare hybrid materials, owing to the distinct behaviours of organic covalent bonds14 and inorganic ionic bonds15 in molecular construction. Here we integrate typical covalent and ionic bonds within one molecule to create an organic–inorganic hybrid molecule, which can be used for bottom-up syntheses of hybrid materials. A combination of the organic covalent thioctic acid (TA) and the inorganic ionic calcium carbonate oligomer (CCO) through an acid–base reaction provides a TA–CCO hybrid molecule with the representative molecular formula TA2Ca(CaCO3)2. Its dual reactivity involving copolymerization of the organic TA segment and inorganic CCO segment generates the respective covalent and ionic networks. The two networks are interconnected through TA–CCO complexes to form a covalent–ionic bicontinuous structure within the resulting hybrid material, poly(TA–CCO), which unifies paradoxical mechanical properties. The reversible binding of Ca2+–CO32− bonds in the ionic network and S–S bonds in the covalent network ensures material reprocessability with plastic-like mouldability while preserving thermal stability. The coexistence of ceramic-like, rubber-like and plastic-like behaviours within poly(TA–CCO) goes beyond current classifications of materials to generate an ‘elastic ceramic plastic’. The bottom-up creation of organic–inorganic hybrid molecules provides a feasible pathway for the molecular engineering of hybrid materials, thereby supplementing the classical methodology used for the manufacture of organic–inorganic hybrid materials.
Date: 2023
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DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06117-1
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