Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5205159 | Polymer Degradation and Stability | 2007 | 5 Pages |
We have obtained unique highly carbonized polyaniline micro- and nanotubes as a new, thermally stable nanomaterial for nanosensors and nanodevices with a wide range of possible applications, comparable to carbon nanotubes. Polyaniline nanostructures are easy to prepare and handle in wet conditions, including controlled growth. Temperature-induced transformations of polyaniline micro- and nanotubes into highly carbonized analogues have been observed at and above 800 °C, while the temperature was elevated slowly from 20 °C up to 1100 °C. Carbonized products have the same morphology (micro- and nanotubes), but a lower spin density than the starting material (e.g. 1014 gâ1 for the sample heated at and above 800 °C, and 1019 gâ1 before heating). Simultaneously, the electrical conductivity changes from 7.4 Ã 10â5 S/cm for the starting material to 4.8 Ã 10â9 S/cm, 1.3 Ã 10â11 S/cm and finally 2.4 Ã 10â6 S/cm for samples obtained at room temperature, 250 °C, 500 °C and 800 °C, respectively. Chemical transformations and unique molecular structures formed are discussed. Applications in nanotechnology, including sensors and electronic nanodevices, are expected in the light of experiments already performed.