| Literature DB >> 33883016 |
Peshawa O Amin1, Kamal Aziz Ketuly2, Salah Raza Saeed1, Fahmi F Muhammadsharif3,4, Mark D Symes5, Avishek Paul5, Khaulah Sulaiman6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The design of new polymers able to filter the electromagnetic spectrum and absorb distinctly in the UV and high-energy part of visible spectrum is crucial for the development of semi-transparent solar cells. Herein, we report on the synthesis and spectroscopic, electrochemical, and photophysical characteristics of three new polymers, namely (i) Poly(triamterene-co-terephthalate), (ii) Poly[triamterene-co- 3-(2-pyridyl)-5,6-diphenyl-1,2,4-triazine-p,p'-disulfonamide], and (iii) Poly(5-hydroxyindole-2-carboxylate) that might show promise as materials for semi-transparent solar cells.Entities:
Keywords: CV measurements; Conjugated polymers; FTIR; Optoelectronic parameters; Semi-transparent photovoltaics; Synthesis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33883016 PMCID: PMC8061061 DOI: 10.1186/s13065-021-00751-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Chem ISSN: 2661-801X
Synthesized materials, molecular structure, nomenclature and their labels
| Precursor | Molecular structure | Synthesized polymer | Label |
|---|---|---|---|
| Triamterene (2,4,7-triamino-6-phenylpteridine, 6-Phenyl-2,4,7-pteridinetriamine) |
| Poly(triamterene-co-terephthalate) | P(TRI-co-TER) |
| The 3-(2-pyridyl)-5,6-diphenyl-1,2,4-triazine-p,p’-disulfonic acid, + Triamterene |
| Poly[triamterene-co- 3-(2-pyridyl)-5,6-diphenyl-1,2,4-triazine-p,p′-disulfonamide] | P(TRI-co-DISULF) |
| 5-Hydroxyindole-2-carboxylic acid |
| Poly(5-hydroxyindole-2-carboxylate) | PINDOLE |
Fig. 1Synthesis route of a Poly(triamterene-co-terephthalate), (P(TRI-co-TER)), b Poly[triamterene-co- 3-(2-pyridyl)-5,6-diphenyl-1,2,4-triazine-p,p’-disulfonamide], (P(TRI-co-DISULF)), and c Poly(5-hydroxyindole-2-carboxylate) (PINDOLE)
Fig. 2a–c FTIR spectra and d–f 1H-NMR spectra for the P(TRI-co-TER), P(TRI-co-DISULF) and PINDOLE polymers
Assignment of FTIR spectra for the three synthesized polymers
| Polymer | Wave number (cm−1) | Assignment |
|---|---|---|
| P(TRI-co-TER) | 1699 | C=O stretching for carboxylic acid [ |
| 1448 | N–H and C–H in plain bending, C–C stretching for normal vibration of pyrrole ring [ | |
| 1228 | C–N stretching at benzene ring [ | |
| 1110 | ||
| 698 | C–H out of plane bending at aromatic ring [ | |
| P(TRI-co-DISULF) | 3377 | N–H stretching for normal vibration of pyrrole ring [ |
| 3066 | C–H stretching at aromatic ring [ | |
| 1624 | C=N stretching in quinones ring [ | |
| 1541 | C=C stretching in quinones ring [ | |
| 1487 | N–H and C–H in plain bending, C–C stretching [ | |
| 1371, 1325 | S=O stretching [ | |
| 752 | C–H, and N–H out of plain bending [ | |
| 678 | C–H, and N–H out of plain bending [ | |
| PINDOLE | 3385 | N–H stretching for normal vibration of pyrrole ring [ |
| 3066 | C–H stretching at aromatic ring [ | |
| 1701 | C=O stretching for carboxylic acid [ | |
| 1624 | C=N stretching in quinones ring [ | |
| 1541 | C=C stretching in quinones ring [ | |
| 1487 | N–H and C–H in plain bending, C–C stretching [ | |
| 1382 | N–H and C–H in plain bending, C–C stretching [ | |
| 1197 | C–H in plain bending [ | |
| 1101 | ||
| 1045 | C–O–C stretching [ | |
| 750 | C–H, and N–H out of plain bending [ | |
| 678 | C–H, and N–H out of plain bending [ | |
| 578 | C–H, and N–H out of plain bending [ |
Fig. 3Absorption coefficient spectra for the three synthesized polymers
Fig. 4a–c Absorbance spectra for all synthesized polymers, d plot of versus for all synthesized polymers, and e plot of versus for all synthesized polymers
Determined energy gap for synthesized polymers from absorbance data
| Polymer | ||
|---|---|---|
| P(TRI-co-TER) | 2.84 eV | 2.92 eV |
| P(TRI-co-DISULF) | 3.63 eV | 3.75 eV |
| PINDOLE | 2.66 eV | 2.85 eV |
Fig. 5a–c The Cyclic Voltammetry (CV) spectra for all synthesized polymers, and d Energy level diagram for all synthesized polymers. The small redox wave at about − 1.1 V vs. Fc+/Fc in the CV of P(TRI-co.-DISULF) corresponds to the reduction of adventitious trace oxygen in the DMSO solvent as previously reported [46]. The irreversible oxidative processes observed in the CVs in a and b are likely due to the oxidation of adventitious water in the DMSO solvent
Electrochemical and optical data for all synthesized polymers
| Polymer | References | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P(TRI-co-TER) | 0.312 | − 1.24 | − 5.70 | − 2.78 | 2.92 | This work |
| P(TRI-co-DISULF) | NA | − 1.68 | − 7.46 | − 3.71 | 3.75 | This work |
| PINDOLE | NA | − 1.72 | − 6.52 | − 3.67 | 2.85 | This work |
| PID2 | NA | NA | − 5.52 | − 3.50 | 2.02 | [ |
| BTI-IDT-BTI | 0.50 | − 1.60 | − 5.30 | − 3.20 | 2.10 | [ |
| PCBM | 1.5 | − 0.98 | − 6.18 | − 3.7 | 2.48 | [ |
Fig. 6a Refractive index and b extinction coefficient spectra for the synthesized polymers
The optoelectronic parameters estimated for the synthesized polymers
| Polymer | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| P(TRI-co-TER) | 1.56 | 2.44 | 2.43 |
| P(TRI-co-DISULF) | 1.62 | 2.63 | 3.31 |
| PINDOLE | 1.68 | 2.91 | 4.13 |
Fig. 7Dielectric constant spectra for all synthesized polymers a Real part, and b Imaginary part
Fig. 8Dielectric lost tangent (dissipation factor) spectra for all synthesized polymers
Fig. 9Optical conductivity spectra for all synthesized polymers a Real part, and b Imaginary part