Electropolymerized Porous Polymer Films on Flexible Indium Tin Oxide Using Trifunctional Furan Substituted Benzene Conjugated Monomer for Biosensing
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Author(s)
Ponnappa, Supreetha Paleyanda
Macleod, Jennifer
Umer, Muhammad
Soda, Narshone
Pannu, Amandeep Singh
Shiddiky, Muhammad JA
Ayoko, Godwin A
O'Mullane, Anthony P
Sonar, Prashant
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2020
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In recent years, conducting polymers are playing a significant role in the field of display devices, transistors, solar cells, sensors, and electrochromic windows due to their outstanding optoelectronic and semiconducting properties due to their conjugated backbone. One potential application that is not as widely explored using these materials is biosensing, where advantage is taken of the porosity that can be generated by the polymerization of a three-dimensional network. There are various approaches for producing conjugated microporous polymers using trifunctional or multifunctional monomers synthesized via chemical or ...
View more >In recent years, conducting polymers are playing a significant role in the field of display devices, transistors, solar cells, sensors, and electrochromic windows due to their outstanding optoelectronic and semiconducting properties due to their conjugated backbone. One potential application that is not as widely explored using these materials is biosensing, where advantage is taken of the porosity that can be generated by the polymerization of a three-dimensional network. There are various approaches for producing conjugated microporous polymers using trifunctional or multifunctional monomers synthesized via chemical or electrochemical methods. In this work, we have used electropolymerization to synthesize conjugated polymer films on a working electrode of flexible indium tin oxide (FITO) using a trifunctional conjugated monomer 1,3,5-tri(furan-2-yl)benzene (TFB). There are several parameters that influence the formation of a porous polymer film, and the most critical ones are substrate conductivity, roughness, method of electropolymerization, and choice of an electrolyte. These porous electropolymerized films were characterized using UV–vis spectroscopy (UV–vis), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), surface profilometry, four-point probe conductivity measurements, and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The polymer films that were electropolymerized using chronoamperometry rather than repetitive potential cycling demonstrated a more suitable morphology to trap DNA/RNA analytes for biosensing applications.
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View more >In recent years, conducting polymers are playing a significant role in the field of display devices, transistors, solar cells, sensors, and electrochromic windows due to their outstanding optoelectronic and semiconducting properties due to their conjugated backbone. One potential application that is not as widely explored using these materials is biosensing, where advantage is taken of the porosity that can be generated by the polymerization of a three-dimensional network. There are various approaches for producing conjugated microporous polymers using trifunctional or multifunctional monomers synthesized via chemical or electrochemical methods. In this work, we have used electropolymerization to synthesize conjugated polymer films on a working electrode of flexible indium tin oxide (FITO) using a trifunctional conjugated monomer 1,3,5-tri(furan-2-yl)benzene (TFB). There are several parameters that influence the formation of a porous polymer film, and the most critical ones are substrate conductivity, roughness, method of electropolymerization, and choice of an electrolyte. These porous electropolymerized films were characterized using UV–vis spectroscopy (UV–vis), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), surface profilometry, four-point probe conductivity measurements, and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The polymer films that were electropolymerized using chronoamperometry rather than repetitive potential cycling demonstrated a more suitable morphology to trap DNA/RNA analytes for biosensing applications.
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Journal Title
ACS Applied Polymer Materials
Volume
2
Issue
2
Copyright Statement
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, © 2020 American Chemical Society after peer review and technical editing by the publisher. To access the final edited and published work see https://doi.org/10.1021/acsapm.9b00826
Subject
Chemical sciences
Macromolecular and materials chemistry
Materials engineering
Science & Technology
Physical Sciences
Polymer Science
conjugated mesoporous polymers
furan