Abstract
We report synthesis of a high-strength renewable phenolic composition with linear large deformation strain without a thermoplastic-like yielding while retaining thermal processability. Small molecule carboxylic acid derivatives with varying molecular architectures act as esterifying crosslinkers in an equal mass mixture of lignin and acrylonitrile–butadiene copolymers in a highly scalable, solvent-free process. These “inverse thermoplastic vulcanizates” (iTPVs)—unique in their approach of crosslinking the rigid lignin phase rather than the soft phase—exhibit ordered self-assembly, tunable nanoscale morphology, and processability. The first of its kind iTPV compositions exhibit engineering stress–strain curves with two- to sixfold linear extensibility, a twofold rise in strength, and an order of magnitude enhanced modulus compared to a simple lignin-rubber blend. Viscoelastic properties correlate well with crosslinker architecture and the resulting morphology, allowing competing properties of toughness and stiffness to be tuned. This research finds a path for identifying the potential of lignin as a sustainable feedstock.