1 research outputs found
A Thiophene-Containing Conductive Metallopolymer Using an Fe(II) Bis(terpyridine) Core for Electrochromic Materials
Three
FeÂ(II) bisÂ(terpyridine)-based complexes with thiophene (FeÂ(L1)<sub>2</sub>), bithiophene (FeÂ(L2)<sub>2</sub>), and 3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene
(FeÂ(L3)<sub>2</sub>) side chains were designed and synthesized for
the purpose of providing two terminal active sites for electrochemical
polymerization. The corresponding metallopolymers (poly-FeÂ(L<i>n</i>)<sub>2</sub>, <i>n</i> = 2 or 3) were synthesized
on indium tin oxide (ITO)-coated glass substrates via oxidative electropolymerization
of the thiophene-substituted monomers and characterized using electrochemistry,
X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, UV–vis spectroscopy, and
atomic force microscopy. The film poly-FeÂ(L2)<sub>2</sub> was further
studied for electrochromic (EC) color-switching properties and fabricated
into a solid-state EC device. Poly-FeÂ(L2)<sub>2</sub> films exhibit
an intense MLCT absorption band at 596 nm (ε = 4.7 × 10<sup>4</sup> M<sup>–1</sup> cm<sup>–1</sup>) in the UV–vis
spectra without any applied voltage. Upon application of low potentials
(between 1.1 and 0.4 V vs Fc<sup>+</sup>/Fc), the obtained electropolymerized
film exhibited great contrast with a change of transmittance percentage
(Δ<i>T</i>%) of 40% and a high coloration efficiency
of 3823 cm<sup>2</sup> C<sup>–1</sup> with a switching time
of 1 s. The film demonstrates commonplace stability and reversibility
with a 10% loss in peak current intensity after 200 cyclic voltammetry
cycles and almost no loss in change of transmittance (Δ<i>T</i>%) after 900 potential switches between 1.1 and 0.4 V (vs
Fc<sup>+</sup>/Fc) with a time interval of 0.75 s. The electropolymerization
of FeÂ(L2)<sub>2</sub> provides convenient and controllable film fabrication.
Electrochromic behavior was also achieved in a solid-state device
composed of a poly-FeÂ(L2)<sub>2</sub> film and a polymer-supported
electrolyte sandwiched between two ITO-coated glass electrodes