Emulsion-templated porous polymers: drying condition-dependent properties

Soft Matter. 2021 Nov 3;17(42):9653-9663. doi: 10.1039/d1sm00831e.

Abstract

Macroporous materials templated using high internal phase emulsions (HIPEs) are promising for various applications. To date, new strategies to create emulsion-templated porous materials and to tune their properties (especially wetting properties) are still highly required. Here, we report the fabrication of macroporous polymers from oil-in-water HIPEs, bereft of conventional monomers and crosslinking monomers, by simultaneous ring-opening polymerization and interface-catalyzed condensation, without heating or removal of oxygen. The resulting macroporous polymers showed drying condition-dependent wetting properties (e.g., hydrophilicity-oleophilicity from freezing drying, hydrophilicity-oleophobicity from vacuum drying, and amphiphobicity from heat drying), densities (from 0.019 to 0.350 g cc-1), and compressive properties. Hydrophilic-oleophilic and amphiphobic porous polymers turned hydrophilic-oleophobic simply by heating and protonation, respectively. The hydrophilic-oleophobic porous polymers could remove a small amount of water from oil-water mixtures (including surfactant-stabilized water-in-oil emulsions) by selective absorption and could remove water-soluble dyes from oil-water mixtures. Moreover, the transition in wetting properties enabled the removal of water and dyes in a controlled manner. The feature that combines simply preparation, tunable wetting properties and densities, robust compression, high absorption capacity (rate) and controllable absorption makes the porous polymers to be excellent candidates for the removal of water and water-soluble dyes from oil-water mixtures.