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Frontal polymerization of thermosets to enable vacuum-formed structural electronics

Nature Communications

Fowler, Hayden E.; Taylor, Mychal S.; Nguyen, Chi P.H.; Boese, David A.; Baca, Esteban; Greenlee, Andrew J.; Kaufman, Georgia E.; Gallegos, Michael A.; Huntley, Emily F.; Appelhans, Leah N.; Kaehr, Bryan; Leguizamon, Samuel C.

Material design and accessible manufacturing are often at odds with each other, calling for creative solutions to adapt high-performance materials to available processes. This challenge is represented well by in-mold electronics, an innovative approach to the manufacture of 3D circuitry and electronic components that offers game-changing advantages. In-mold electronics relies on vacuum forming processes, which are historically limited to thermoplastics. Extending these methods to include thermosets would enable manufacturing of robust components with desirable properties. Here, we provide a solution to make thermoset materials amenable to vacuum forming. Specifically, an ambient polymerization is used to transition a liquid monomeric solution to an elastomeric gel. These free-standing gels can then be vacuum formed, and the reaction can be completed via frontal polymerization. Thermoset materials produced with this method have properties that provide benefits over traditionally employed thermoplastic substrates and enable 3D device integration into environmentally demanding architectural, automotive, and extraterrestrial structures.

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Advances in vat photopolymerization: early-career researchers shine light on a path forward

RSC Applied Polymers

Fowler, Hayden E.; Bean, Ren H.; Dhand, Abhishek P.; Saccone, Max A.; Chiaradia, Viviane; Dranseike, Dalia; Fraser, Julia M.; Howard, Holden; Kaneko, Takashi; Kim, Ji W.; Kronenfeld, Jason M.; Mason, Keldy S.; O'Dea, Connor J.; Pashley-Johnson, Fred; Porcincula, Dominique H.; Segal, Maddison I.; Yu, Siwei

Vat photopolymerization (VP) has emerged as a promising additive manufacturing technique to allow rapid light-based fabrication of 3D objects from a liquid resin. Research in the field of vat photopolymerization spans across multiple disciplines from engineering and materials science to applied chemistry and physics. This perspective brings together early-career researchers from various disciplines in academia and national laboratories around the world to summarize the most recent advancements with special emphasis on the research highlighted as part of the Gordon Research Conference (GRC) 2024 meeting on Additive Manufacturing of Soft Materials. We provide an outlook on next-generation polymer processing methods from synthesis of novel materials to multimodality manufacturing and performance engineering. Further, this article combines the ideas of many of these junior researchers to present a vision for the future of the field by highlighting the challenges and opportunities that lie ahead.

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