Abstract
Epoxy resins are widely used in the composite industry due to their dimensional stability,
chemical resistance, and thermo-mechanical properties. However, these thermoset resins have
important drawbacks. (i) The vast majority of epoxy matrices are based on non-renewable
fossil-derived materials, and (ii) the highly cross-linked molecular architecture hinders their
reprocessing, repairing, and recycling. In this paper, those two aspects are addressed by
combining novel biobased epoxy monomers derived from renewable resources and dynamic
crosslinks. Vanillin (lignin) and phloroglucinol (sugar bioconversion) precursors have been used
to develop bi- and tri-functional epoxy monomers, diglycidyl ether of vanillyl alcohol (DGEVA)
and phloroglucinol triepoxy (PHTE) respectively. Additionally, reversible covalent bonds have
been incorporated in the network by using an aromatic disulfide-based diamine hardener. Four
epoxy matrices with di erent ratios of epoxy monomers (DGEVA/PHTE wt%: 100/0, 60/40, 40/60,
and 0/100) were developed and fully characterized in terms of thermal and mechanical properties.
We demonstrate that their performances are comparable to those of commonly used fossil fuel-based
epoxy thermosets with additional advanced reprocessing functionalities.