| Literature DB >> 27019715 |
Zia Ullah Khan1, Olga Bubnova2, Mohammad Javad Jafari3, Robert Brooke4, Xianjie Liu3, Roger Gabrielsson1, Thomas Ederth3, Drew R Evans5, Jens W Andreasen6, Mats Fahlman3, Xavier Crispin1.
Abstract
PEDOT-Tos is one of the conducting polymers that displays the most promising thermoelectric properties. Until now, it has been utterly difficult to control all the synthesis parameters and the morphology governing the thermoelectric properties. To improve our understanding of this material, we study the variation in the thermoelectric properties by a simple acido-basic treatment. The emphasis of this study is to elucidate the chemical changes induced by acid (HCl) or base (NaOH) treatment in PEDOT-Tos thin films using various spectroscopic and structural techniques. We could identify changes in the nanoscale morphology due to anion exchange between tosylate and Cl- or OH-. But, we identified that changing the pH leads to a tuning of the oxidation level of the polymer, which can explain the changes in thermoelectric properties. Hence, a simple acid-base treatment allows finding the optimum for the power factor in PEDOT-Tos thin films.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 27019715 PMCID: PMC4786950 DOI: 10.1039/c5tc01952d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mater Chem C Mater ISSN: 2050-7526 Impact factor: 7.393
Fig. 1(a) Schematic of the sample structure for the Seebeck coefficient and electrical conductivity measurement. Glass substrates with patterned Au lines were used as electrodes and thermistors. Thermistors used for temperature measurements were insulated from PEDOT-Tos films with SiN thin layers. (b) TE properties of VVPP PEDOT-Tos films when a single sample is treated with solution of pH 1 to pH 14. (c) TE properties of CP PEDOT-Tos films when one sample is treated with solutions from pH 1 to pH 14. (d) The Arrhenius plot of pristine (untreated) samples of VVPP and CP PEDOT-Tos in the temperature window of 210–300 K. The inset shows the electrical conductivity of the polymer films as the temperature was decreased from 350 K to 80 K in steps of 10 K. Both VVPP and CP films show semi-conducting behavior as the conductivity increases with a rise in temperature.
Fig. 2XPS spectra where distinct CP PEDOT-Tos samples were treated with different pH solutions. The pristine (untreated) sample is labelled as pH 5.5 in all four spectra (a) complete wide-scan XPS spectra showing the presence of Cl– in lower pH treated samples (b) S2p spectra showing a diminishing amount of tosylate as the film is treated with low or high pH solutions (c) O1s spectra showing the presence of an oxygen peak at 531 eV for high pH treatment when OH– is present while it reduces at low pH when Cl– is replacing tosylate (d) C1s spectra showing new peaks at pH > 10 due to the presence of new CO bonds indicating ring opening.
Fig. 3GIWAXS of distinct CP films of PEDOT-Tos treated with different pH solutions (a) 0.01 M HCl treated film and (b) 10 M HCl treated film, (c) domain size at various acid/base treatments indicating a decrease in the domain size at acidic and basic treatments confirming the fact that bulky tosylate ions have been replaced with small Cl– or OH– and (d) a simple sketch showing the lamellar structure of pristine (untreated) and acid/base treated samples.
Fig. 4(a) Absorption spectra of one CP PEDOT-Tos film treated from 10 M HCl to 10 M NaOH. The arrow indicates the trends while going from acidic to basic treatments of the film, (b) absorption at 600, 900 and 1220 nm after acid/base treatment. While going from acidic towards basic treatments, there is a decrease in absorption at ∼1220 nm and an enhancement in the peak at ∼600 nm, indicating quenching of bipolarons and appearance of neutral segments in PEDOT-Tos films causing a decrease in the electrical conductivity.
Fig. 5The FTIR spectra of distinct CP films of PEDOT-Tos treated with acid/base solutions. The pristine (untreated) film is labelled as pH 5.5 treated (a) full FTIR spectra showing the finger print regions of PEDOT (b) FTIR spectra at 1600–1400 cm–1 showing the shift of CC stretch to lower wavenumbers while the Cα Cβ stretch shifts to higher wavenumbers affecting the bonding pattern (c) peak position variation indicating the transformation of the quinoid into benzoid structure as we go from acidic to basic treatment of the polymer films resulting in a decrease in electrical conductivity.