CHEM Seminar: “From Rational Design to Functional Polymers: Creativity in Materials Science”, Hatice Mutlu, 12:30Noon March 3 2026 (EN)

You are cordially invited to attend the seminar organized by the Department of Chemistry.
Title: From Rational Design to Functional Polymers: Creativity in Materials Science
Speaker: Dr. Hatice Mutlu (Polymer Chemistry at the Rhineland-Palatinate University of Technology Kaiserslautern-Landau (RPTU) and serves as the Head of Polymer Chemistry at the Leibniz Institute for Composite Materials (IVW))

Date: 03/03/2026, Tuesday
Time: 12:30 (Turkiye Time)
Place: SBZ-14

From Rational Design to Functional Polymers: Creativity in Materials Science

The development of functional polymeric materials requires a balance between molecular design principles and creative materials engineering. In this talk, I will outline how insights from polymer chemistry can be translated into materials with tailored properties, and how creativity plays a key role in navigating complex structure–property relationships. Concepts of sustainability, circularity, and precision macromolecular design form a central framework for this discussion [1].

The presentation will highlight general strategies in monomer selection, polymerization, and post-polymerization modification that enable access to polymers with diverse functionalities, including mechanical, optical, and responsive behavior. Recent examples demonstrate how rational control over molecular spacing and sulfur incorporation can transform traditionally soft polymer motifs into structurally ordered and optically active materials [2,3]. These studies illustrate how subtle molecular variations can lead to pronounced differences in macroscopic performance.

The talk will also address the growing importance of sustainability-driven polymer design, where waste-derived feedstocks, metal-free transformations, and polymer metamorphosis are leveraged to generate value-added functional materials. In this context, multicomponent upcycling strategies and programmed degradability provide powerful routes toward adaptable and circular polymer systems [4,5]. By combining fundamental understanding with creative problem-solving, polymer chemists can develop functional materials that meet both technological and societal demands.

References

  1. H. Mutlu, L. Barner, Getting the terms right: Green, Sustainable, or Circular Chemistry? Macromol. Chem. Phys., 2022, 223, 2200111.
  2. B. Pektas, C. M. Q. Le, S. Hajjar-Garreau, S. Gree, H. Mutlu, A Dithio Vinylthio C₂ Synthon Enabling Crystalline and Luminescent Sulfur-Decorated Polymers, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., accepted.
  3. A. W. Woodhouse, B. Pektas, C. M. Q. Le, J. A. Garden, H. Mutlu, Lauric Diacid-Derived Sulfur-Decorated Functional Polymers Displaying Programmable Thermal and Unconventional Luminescence Properties by Simple Thionation, Macromol. Rapid Commun., 2025, 10.1002/marc.202500056.
  4. J. Jeschke, J. Hobich, H. Mutlu, Metal-Free Multicomponent Upcycling of Polybutadiene to Sulfonamide-Functionalized Materials, Macromol. Rapid Commun., 2025, 10.1002/marc.70082.
  5. M. Hill, J. Jeschke, H. Mutlu, J. A. Garden, Sculpting with Sulfur: Programmed-Degradable Polythionoesters via Polyester Metamorphosis, ChemRxiv, 2025, 10.26434/chemrxiv-2025-c3bn3.

Short Biography of the Speaker: Dr. Hatice Mutlu is a Professor (W3) of Polymer Chemistry at the Rhineland-Palatinate University of Technology Kaiserslautern-Landau(RPTU) and serves as the Head of Polymer Chemistry at the Leibniz Institute for Composite Materials (IVW). She earned her PhD from the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) in 2012 under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Michael A. R. Meier, focusing on sustainable approaches to renewable chemicals and polymers. Following her doctoral studies, Dr. Mutlu, held a CNRS Post-Doctoral Fellowship at the Institut Charles Sadron in Strasbourg and later returned to KIT, where she led the Soft Matter Synthesis Laboratory (SML) for several years. Prior to her current appointment at RPTU, she served as an Assistant Professor at the Université de Haute-Alsace (UHA) in France.