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Substituted polypyrrole films, cyclic

If the film is nonconductive, the ion must diffuse to the electrode surface before it can be oxidized or reduced, or electrons must diffuse (hop) through the film by self-exchange, as in regular ionomer-modified electrodes.9 Cyclic voltammograms have the characteristic shape for diffusion control, and peak currents are proportional to the square root of the scan speed, as seen for species in solution. This is illustrated in Fig. 21 (A) for [Fe(CN)6]3 /4 in polypyrrole with a pyridinium substituent at the 1-position.243 This N-substituted polypyrrole does not become conductive until potentials significantly above the formal potential of the [Fe(CN)6]3"/4 couple. In contrast, a similar polymer with a pyridinium substituent at the 3-position is conductive at this potential. The polymer can therefore mediate electron transport to and from the immobilized ions, and their voltammetry becomes characteristic of thin-layer electrochemistry [Fig. 21(B)], with sharp symmetrical peaks that increase linearly with increasing scan speed. [Pg.589]

In all cases, the films were obtained by oxidative electropolymerization of the cited substituted complexes from organic or aqueous solutions. The mechanism of metalloporphyrin Him formation was suggested to be a radical-cation induced polymerization of the substituents on the periphery of the macrocycle. As it was reported for the case of polypyrrole-based materials ", cyclic voltammetry and UV-visible spectroscopy with optically transparent electrodes were extensively used to provide information on the polymeric films (electroactivity, photometric properties, chemical stability, conductivity, etc.). Based on the available data, it appears that the electrochemical polymerization of the substituted complexes leads to well-structured multilayer films. It also appears that the low conductivity of the formed films, combined with the cross-linking effects due to the steric hindrance induced by the macrocyclic Ugand, confers to these materials a certain number of limitations such as the limited continuous growth of the polymers due to the absence of electronic conductivity of the films. Indeed, the charge transport in many of these films acts only by electron-hopping process between porphyrin sites. [Pg.384]

The redox behavior of polythiophene and substituted polythiophenes (mainly 3-alkyl substituted) is closely related to that of polypyrrole, as might be expected. The cyclic voltammogram of polythiophene [42] shows that oxidation of the polymer occurs at 1.0 V versus SCE whereas reduction occurs at 0.9 V. Past 1.71 V, another peak appears, and if the potential of the film is taken beyond this value, deactivation of the film occurs. But in another aspect polythiophene differs from polypyrrole. It shows better redox activity when there is a substituent in the ring. In fact, the processibility (ability to spin cast films etc.) also improves, especially if there are hexyl or octyl groups substituted at the 3-position. [Pg.112]


See other pages where Substituted polypyrrole films, cyclic is mentioned: [Pg.213]    [Pg.122]    [Pg.523]    [Pg.285]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.758]   


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