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Ascorbic Acid-Modified Silicones: Crosslinking and...
Journal article

Ascorbic Acid-Modified Silicones: Crosslinking and Antioxidant Delivery

Abstract

Vitamin C is widely used as an antioxidant in biological systems. The very high density of functional groups makes it challenging to selectively tether this molecule to other moieties. We report that, following protection of the enediol as benzyl ethers, the introduction of an acrylate ester at C1 is straightforward. Ascorbic acid-modified silicones were synthesized via aza-Michael reactions of aminoalkylsilicones with ascorbic acrylate. Viscous oils formed when the amine/acrylate ratios were <1. However, at higher amine/acrylate ratios with pendent silicones, a double reaction occurred to give robust elastomers whose modulus is readily tuned simply by controlling the ascorbic acid amine ratio that leads to crosslinks. Reduction with H2/Pd removed the benzyl ethers and led to increased crosslinking, and either liberated the antioxidant small molecule or produced antioxidant elastomers. These pro-antioxidant elastomers show the power of exploiting natural materials as co-constituents of silicone polymers.

Authors

Lu G; Yepremyen A; Tamim K; Chen Y; Brook MA

Journal

Polymers, Vol. 14, No. 22,

Publisher

MDPI

Publication Date

November 1, 2022

DOI

10.3390/polym14225040

ISSN

2073-4360

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