Reprint

Conductive Polymers

Materials and Applications

Edited by
July 2020
184 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03936-497-8 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-03936-498-5 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Conductive Polymers: Materials and Applications that was published in

Chemistry & Materials Science
Engineering
Physical Sciences
Summary

The pioneering work by Nobel Prize Laureates Heeger, MacDiarmid, and Shirakawa marked the birth of conductive polymers, a new family of revolutionary organic materials at the boundaries between classic plastics, metals, and semiconductors. Since then, a host of chemically diverse conducting polymeric structures has been devised with fascinating optical, electrical, magnetic, and redox properties that can be tuned using easy chemical/electrochemical doping. In recent decades, the combination and blend of conductive polymers with other materials families (e.g., carbon nanomaterials, metal nanoparticles or oxide nanostructures, common polymers, and resins) fostered the advent of a new generation of hybrid multifunctional composites with enhanced properties and high potential for present and near-future everyday life applications, ranging from photovoltaics, OLEDs, smart windows and garments, plastic batteries for sensors, and intelligent actuators. In this book, we compile some of the latest advances in the field, covering both old issues and new examples emphasizing emerging applications in biomedical science, healthcare, separation science, and water pollution abatement.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2020 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
polyacetylene; double-minimum potential; Peierls barrier; zero-point level; cross-linking; antimicrobial; surfaces; infection control; polyaniline; Escherichia coli; Staphylococcus aureus; polyaniline; Si-PANI; d-SPE; MSPD; triterpenes; sample pretreatment; copolymer; polyaniline; piperazine; FTIR in situ; conducting polymers; electroactive polymers; medical devices; drug delivery; anti-inflammatory; antibiotic; Basic Blue 3 dye (BB3), polyaniline/Fe3O4 composite; Freundlich; Langmuir; Tempkin and Dubbanin-Radushkavitch adsorption isotherm; conducting polymer; emeraldine salt state; valence band; flexible composite electrode; dye adsorption kinetics; pseudo-second order model; capacitance; electrical conductivity; Acid blue 40 dye; adsorption isotherms; kinetics and thermodynamic study; PEDOT-PSS; SiO2; sol-gel; hybrid materials; ferrocene; polyacetylene; polyaniline; polypyrrole; PEDOT-PSS; copolymers; charge transport models; silica gel composite; carbon composite; antimicrobial; drug release; sensors; adsorption