TY - JOUR
T1 - Tuning the Interfacial Chemistry of Redox-Active Polymer for Bifunctional Probing
AU - Aralekallu, Shambhulinga
AU - Thimmappa, Ravikumar
AU - Gaikwad, Pramod
AU - Devendrachari, Mruthyunjayachari Chattanahalli
AU - Kottaichamy, Alagar Raja
AU - Shafi, Shahid Pottachola
AU - Lokesh, Koodlur Sannegowda
AU - Sánchez, Julio
AU - Thotiyl, Musthafa Ottakam
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
PY - 2017/3/1
Y1 - 2017/3/1
N2 - Redox-active conducting polymers are ubiquitous in sensing devices, owing to their good conductivity, ease of synthesis, and processability. The necessity of proton transfer during their redox energy modulations projected them as universal pH sensors, owing to Nernstian dependence of electromotive force (EMF) on the pH. Here, we show that the pH-dependent Nernstian EMF of redox-active conducting polymeric interfaces becomes universal only with a cation-selective ionomer cover, without which the interface transforms depending on the chemistry of the conjugate base, owing to the dependency of the polymer's redox energy on the nature of the conjugate base. For an uncovered redox-active polymer, galvanostatic intermittent titration (GITT) and electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance (EQCM) studies demonstrate a clear distinction in the kinetics of psuedocapacitive charge injection between spherical and tetrahedral anions, leading to a multifunctional ion-sensing probe. Nonetheless, for a polymer with a cation-selective ionomer cover, GITT and EQCM measurements demonstrate a unified response, irrespective of the nature of the conjugate bases, owing to rectified cationic transport, leading to a universal pH sensor. A bifunctional ion-sensing meter is constructed by coupling the redox-active polymer probe with a non-polarizable interface and it can signal the end user the cation concentration and the type of conjugate base in a single measurement.
AB - Redox-active conducting polymers are ubiquitous in sensing devices, owing to their good conductivity, ease of synthesis, and processability. The necessity of proton transfer during their redox energy modulations projected them as universal pH sensors, owing to Nernstian dependence of electromotive force (EMF) on the pH. Here, we show that the pH-dependent Nernstian EMF of redox-active conducting polymeric interfaces becomes universal only with a cation-selective ionomer cover, without which the interface transforms depending on the chemistry of the conjugate base, owing to the dependency of the polymer's redox energy on the nature of the conjugate base. For an uncovered redox-active polymer, galvanostatic intermittent titration (GITT) and electrochemical quartz crystal microbalance (EQCM) studies demonstrate a clear distinction in the kinetics of psuedocapacitive charge injection between spherical and tetrahedral anions, leading to a multifunctional ion-sensing probe. Nonetheless, for a polymer with a cation-selective ionomer cover, GITT and EQCM measurements demonstrate a unified response, irrespective of the nature of the conjugate bases, owing to rectified cationic transport, leading to a universal pH sensor. A bifunctional ion-sensing meter is constructed by coupling the redox-active polymer probe with a non-polarizable interface and it can signal the end user the cation concentration and the type of conjugate base in a single measurement.
KW - anion recognition
KW - cation sensor
KW - conjugate base chemistry
KW - redox energy modulation
KW - redox-active polymers
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85011417963&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/celc.201600775
DO - 10.1002/celc.201600775
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85011417963
SN - 2196-0216
VL - 4
SP - 692
EP - 700
JO - ChemElectroChem
JF - ChemElectroChem
IS - 3
ER -