posted on 2022-12-06, 12:33authored bySunay
Dilara Ekim, Görkem Eylül Kaya, Murat Daştemir, Erol Yildirim, H. Tarik Baytekin, Bilge Baytekin
Common polymers can
accumulate surface charges through
contact,
a phenomenon known since ancient times. This charge accumulation can
have detrimental consequences in industry. It causes accidents and
yields enormous economic losses. Many empirical methods have been
developed to prevent the problems caused by charge accumulation. However,
a general chemical approach is still missing in the literature since
the charge accumulation and discharging mechanisms have not been completely
clarified. The current practice to achieve charge mitigation is to
increase materials conductivity by high doping of conductive additives.
A recent study showed that using photoexcitation of some organic dyes,
charge decay can be started remotely, and the minute amount of additive
does not change the material’s conductivity. Here, we show
the contact charging and charge decay behavior of polydimethylsiloxane
doped with a series of organic charge transfer cocrystals (CTC) of
TCNQ acceptor and substituted pyrene donors (CTC-PDMS). The results
show that the CTC-PDMS are antistatic, and the discharging propensity
of the composites follows the calculated charge transfer degree of
the complexes. On the other hand, the CTC-PDMS are still insulators,
as shown by their high surface resistivities. Kelvin probe force microscopy
images of the contact-charged and discharged samples show a quick
potential decay in CTC domains upon illumination. Combined with the
fast overall decay observed, the antistatic behavior in these insulators
can be attributed to an electron transfer between the mechanoions
in the polymer and the CTC frontier orbitals. We believe our results
will help with the general understanding of the molecular mechanism
of contact charging and discharging and help develop insulator antistatics.