Shape-Dependent Conduction Regime in Self-Doped Polyaniline
Posted on 2022-05-02 - 19:12
Conductive
polymers are key building blocks for the construction
of molecular devices, and it is crucial to elucidate the conduction
properties in microscale-shaped nanometer-thickness thin films in
which the number of conduction paths is limited. In this study, we
describe the effect of chemical doping and spatial limitation on the
electrical conduction properties of sulfonated polyaniline (SPAN)
strips with nanometer thickness fabricated by fountain-pen lithography
and consider their electrical conduction mechanism. Raman spectroscopy
indicated that the polarons in the SPAN strips decreased with increasing
pH of the SPAN solution. According to the electrical measurements,
the current–voltage (I–V) characteristics switched from linear to nonlinear by reducing the
polarons and the conducting paths in thin strips. The results suggest
that the nonlinear properties arise from the reduction of effective
hopping barriers between a small number of conductive regions applied
with localized electric field in the bottleneck region.