PHYSICAL-PROPERTIES OF NONIONOMERIC AND IONOMERIC SEGMENTED POLYURETHANES - EFFECT OF SULFONATE, CARBOXYLATE, AND QUATERNARY AMMONIUM-IONS IN THE HARD SEGMENT
Jp. Santerre et Jl. Brash, PHYSICAL-PROPERTIES OF NONIONOMERIC AND IONOMERIC SEGMENTED POLYURETHANES - EFFECT OF SULFONATE, CARBOXYLATE, AND QUATERNARY AMMONIUM-IONS IN THE HARD SEGMENT, Industrial & engineering chemistry research, 36(4), 1997, pp. 1352-1359
Polyurethane ionomers are of practical interest because of structural
properties which result from ion pair interactions. in some ionomers,
the ions are located in the backbone of the polymer, while in others,
they are present in pendant groups. These variations, combined with va
riations in ion type can provide materials with a broad range of struc
tures. In this work, derivatization chemistry was used to vary the ion
type in sulfonated polyurethanes by attaching different amino acids (
lysine, aspartic acid, glycine, and arginine methyl ester) as pendant
moieties to the sulfonate groups, via sulfonamide linkages. While the
modified materials had similar amino acid concentrations and molecular
weights, they each displayed unique mechanical properties. Differenti
al scanning calorimetry was used to investigate the structure of these
polyurethanes and showed that the supramolecular structural elements
(microphase domains) are disassembled upon heating. it was also shown
that ammonium type cations undergo a first-order endothermic thermal t
ransition in these materials at elevated temperatures. The superpositi
on of ionomer character on the microphase-separated structure of segme
nted polyurethanes appears to add significantly to their range of mech
anical behavior and could provide materials with new end use applicati
ons.