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Evidence supporting an emulsion polymerisation mechanism for the formation of polyaniline

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-07-27, 13:48 authored by Sahar S M Alabdullah, Hani K Ismail, Karl S Ryder, Andrew P Abbott
The electropolymerisation of aniline is a well-studied and often used technology. While the mechanism has been investigated in a variety of media these have all concentrated on understanding the process on a molecular level. Anomalies in the electropolymerisation of aniline in four deep eutectic solvents, DESs, using urea, ethylene glycol, glycerol and oxalic acids as hydrogen bond donors with choline chloride led to an investigation of the aniline phase behaviour. It was only with oxalic acid that polymerisation was achieved and adjusting the pH of the other DESs using sulphuric acid did not enable polymer formation suggesting that pH was not the only factor enabling polymer growth. When 10 wt% water was added, polymers could be grown in all the DESs despite negligible change in solution pH. Dynamic light scattering showed that polymer only formed in systems where aniline formed an emulsion. SEM and AFM showed that the polyaniline films were formed of an agglomeration of small particles of the same dimensions as the dispersed monomer phase in solution. This suggests that the droplets of the monomer arrive at the electrode surface where they polymerise. This provides the first evidence that polyaniline grows by an emulsion polymerisation mechanism even in aqueous solutions.

History

Citation

Electrochimica Acta, Volume 354, 10 September 2020, 136737

Author affiliation

School of Chemistry

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Electrochimica Acta

Volume

354

Pagination

136737

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0013-4686

Acceptance date

2020-07-05

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2021-07-08

Language

en

Publisher version

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0013468620311300?via=ihub#!

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