Abstract

Electroactive films based on conducting polymers have numerous potential applications, but practical devices frequently require a combination of properties not met by a single component. This has prompted an extension to composite materials, notably those in which particulates are immobilised within a polymer film. Irrespective of the polymer and the intended application, film wetting is important: by various means, it facilitates transport processes - of electronic charge, charge-balancing counter ions ("dopant") and analyte/reactant molecules - and motion of polymer segments. While film solvent content and transfer have been widely studied for pristine polymer films exposed to molecular solvents, extension to non-conventional solvents (such as ionic liquids) or to composite films has been given much less attention. Here we consider such cases based on polyaniline films. We explore two factors, the nature of the electrolyte (solvent and film-permeating ions) and the effect of introducing particulate species into the film. In the first instance, we compare film behaviours when exposed to a conventional protic solvent (water) with an aprotic ionic liquid (Ethaline) and the intermediate case of a protic ionic liquid (Oxaline). Secondly, we explore the effect of inclusion of physically diverse particulates: multi-walled carbon nanotubes, graphite or molybdenum dioxide. We use electrochemistry to control and monitor the film redox state and change therein, and acoustic wave measurements to diagnose rheologically vs. gravimetrically determined response. The outcomes provide insights of relevance to future practical applications, including charge/discharge rates and cycle life for energy storage devices, "salt" transfer in water purification technologies, and the extent of film "memory" of previous environments when sequentially exposed to different media.

Highlights

  • Conducting polymers based on aromatic monomers have attracted huge research interest[1]: examples include polypyrrole[2]; polyaniline[3] and derivatives such as poly-o-toluidine and poly-o-aminophenol; polythiophene[4,5,6] and its derivative poly(3,4ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT)[7]; polyfluorene[8]; poly(5-aminoquinoline)[9] and poly[bis(phenylamino)disulphide]10

  • Quantitative deposition and full reduction across both redox processes is associated with a ratio of 0.5; we deduce that the efficiency of PANI/multi-walled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) deposition is high

  • The overall aim of the present study is an understanding of how changing electroactive film composition and electrolyte type influenced film wettability by the bathing electrolyte

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Summary

Introduction

Conducting polymers based on aromatic monomers have attracted huge research interest[1]: examples include polypyrrole[2]; polyaniline[3] and derivatives such as poly-o-toluidine and poly-o-aminophenol; polythiophene[4,5,6] and its derivative poly(3,4ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT)[7]; polyfluorene[8]; poly(5-aminoquinoline)[9] and poly[bis(phenylamino)disulphide]10. Electron transfer at the electrode/polymer interface creates positive charge sites, for which electroneutrality requires the entry of anions (or exit of cations) at the polymer/solution interface[25] (colloquially, “(un-)doping”). These ion transfers have been explored in detail for polypyrrole exposed to aqueous[26,27,28,29,30,31] and non-aqueous[32,33,34] media. When the transferred ion is proton, this can significantly influence the extent of solvent transfer[45]

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