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The role of unbound oligomers in the nucleation and growth of electrodeposited polypyrrole and method for preparing high strength, high conductivity films

journal contribution
posted on 2012-01-01, 00:00 authored by W Zheng, Joselito RazalJoselito Razal, G Spinks, V T Truong, P Whitten, G Wallace
Polypyrrole is a material with immensely useful properties suitable for a wide range of electrochemical applications, but its development has been hindered by cumbersome manufacturing processes. Here we show that a simple modification to the standard electrochemical polymerization method produces polypyrrole films of equivalently high conductivity and superior mechanical properties in one-tenth of the polymerization time. Preparing the film as a series of electrodeposited layers with thorough solvent washing between layering was found to produce excellent quality films even when layer deposition was accelerated by high current. The washing step between the sequentially polymerized layers altered the deposition mechanism, eliminating the typical dendritic growth and generating nonporous deposits. Solvent washing was shown to reduce the concentration of oligomeric species in the near-electrode region and hinder the three-dimensional growth mechanism that occurs by deposition of secondary particles from solution. As artificial muscles, the high density sequentially polymerized films produced the highest mechanical work output yet reported for polypyrrole actuators.

History

Journal

Langmuir

Volume

28

Issue

29

Pagination

10891 - 10897

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Location

Washington, DC

ISSN

0743-7463

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal