Abstract
Conducting polymer (CP) thin films find widespread use, for example in bioelectronic, energy harvesting and storage, and drug delivery technology. Electrosynthesis at a polarisable liquid|liquid interface using an aqueous oxidant and organic soluble monomer provides a route to free-standing and scalable CP thin films, such as poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT), in a single step at ambient conditions. Here, using the potentiodynamic technique of cyclic voltammetry, interfacial electrosynthesis involving ion-exchange, electron transfer, and proton adsorption charge transfer processes is shown to be mechanistically distinct from CP electropolymerisation at a solid electrode|electrolyte interface. The applied interfacial Galvani potential difference controls the interfacial concentration of the oxidant, EDOT monomers and oligomers, but not the CP redox state. Nevertheless, typical CP electropolymerisation electrochemical behaviours, such as steady charge accumulation with each successive cycle and the appearance of a nucleation loop, were observed. By combining (spectro)electrochemical measurements and theoretical models, this work identifies the underlying mechanistic origin of each feature on the cyclic voltammograms (CVs) due to charge accumulated from Faradaic and capacitive processes as the PEDOT thin film grows. The experimental methodology and theoretical models outlined in this article provide a broadly generic framework to understand evolving CVs during interfacial electrosynthesis using any suitable oxidant/monomer combination.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary Information
Description
Supplementary Contents
S1. Supplementary methods.
S2. Electrochemistry of pre-formed EDOT oligomers at a polarisable aqueous|TFT interface.
S3. The onset interfacial Galvani potential difference for IET of a biphasic single-step IET reaction.
S4. Effect of the applied Δow𝜙 on the ionic distributions in the interfacial region.
S5. Spectroelectrochemical UV-vis-NIR analysis of a PEDOT thin film.
S6. Capacitive currents contributing to the steady growth of the charge accumulated during interfacial electrosynthesis.
S7. Modelling of peak β as capacitive current due to anion exchange.
S8. Modelling of the capacitive current peak due to proton adsorption.
S9. Scan rate studies of PEDOT interfacial electrosynthesis.
Supplementary References
Actions
Supplementary weblinks
Title
Mathematica notebooks
Description
Mathematica notebook supporting research article "Potentiodynamic Electrosynthesis of PEDOT Thin Films at a Polarisable Liquid|Liquid Interface"
Actions
View