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Conducting polyaniline prepared in the solutions of formic acid: Does functionalization with carboxyl groups occur?

Publication at Faculty of Mathematics and Physics |
2020

Abstract

Polyaniline is a conducting polymer with an application potential in the field of biomedical engineering. By employing FTIR spectroscopy and conductivity measurements, it has been shown that the oxidation at stoichiometric peroxydisulfate-to-aniline mole ratio 1.25 in the solutions of formic acid in the range 0-10 M provides samples of a moderate conductivity of the orders 0.01-0.1 S cm(-1).

They consist of polyaniline and aniline oligomers as typical of the aniline oxidation in weak acids. The detailed investigation of the infrared spectra indicates a partial ring-carboxylation of polyaniline at high acid concentrations.

The extent of structural defects is higher for a series prepared at over-stoichiometric peroxydisulfate-to-aniline mole ratio 2.5, which provided only non-conducting samples. The reference sample series represented by poly(aniline-co-o-aminobenzoic acid) was also prepared and is used in the discussion of the infrared spectra.