| Literature DB >> 35492894 |
Juanjuan Yin1,2, Qingqing Liu1, Jingxin Zhou1, Lexin Zhang1, Qingrui Zhang1, Randi Rao1, Shufeng Liu3, Tifeng Jiao1,2.
Abstract
A conductive hydrogel is a composite conductive material formed by combining a conductive polymer with a nanogel structure of a hydrogel. Conductive hydrogels not only have potential applications in supercapacitors, sensors, and modulators, they can also be synthesized by many methods, such as copolymerization, crosslinking, and grafting. In this work, we successfully prepared three conductive composite hydrogels by in situ polymerization, namely polypyrrole sodium alginate conductive hydrogel, ferric chloride-doped polypyrrole sodium alginate hydrogel and doped polypyrrole sodium alginate hydrogel with sodium dodecylbenzene sulfonate. In addition, a series of characterizations were performed for the three conductive hydrogels described above. The results show that the polypyrrole sodium alginate hydrogel doped with ferric chloride forms a nanofiber network with a more stable structure and better electrochemical performance. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 35492894 PMCID: PMC9050440 DOI: 10.1039/d0ra00102c
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 4.036
Fig. 1Schematic diagram of synthesis process of composite hydrogels.
Fig. 2SEM images of composite hydrogels: (a and b) polypyrrole hydrogel; (c and d) polypyrrole sodium alginate hydrogel; (e and f) ferric chloride-doped composite hydrogel; (g and h) sodium dodecyl benzenesulfonate-doped hydrogel.
Fig. 3Elemental mapping of ferric chloride-doped composite hydrogel.
Fig. 4TEM images of composite hydrogels: (a and b) polypyrrole hydrogel; (c and d) polypyrrole sodium alginate hydrogel; (e and f) ferric chloride-doped composite hydrogel; (g and h) sodium dodecyl benzenesulfonate-doped hydrogel.
Fig. 5XRD patterns (a), TG curves (b), Raman curves (c), and FT-IR curves (d) of three polypyrrole alginate composite hydrogels.
Fig. 6Cyclic voltammograms of three polypyrrole sodium alginate composite hydrogels at scanning speeds of 50 mV s−1 (a), 75 mV s−1 (b), 100 mV s−1 (c), and total comparison (d).
Fig. 7Electrochemical impedance spectra of three polypyrrole sodium alginate composite hydrogels.