List of conjugated polymers
Class | Abbr. | Polymer | Typical dopants | Peak conductivity | Peak emission |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PA | Polyacetylene | ||||
PT | Polythiophene | Iodine, bromine, Trifluoroacetic acid, propionic acid, sulfonic acids | 1000 S/cm[3] | ||
P3AT | Poly(3-alkylthiophenes) | ||||
PPy | Polypyrrole | ||||
PITN | Poly(isothianaphthene) | ||||
PEDOT | Poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) | ||||
PPV | MEH-PPV | alkoxy-substituted poly(p-phenylene vinylene) | orange-red | ||
PPV | BCHA-PPV | poly(2,5-bis(cholestanoxy) phenylene vinylene) | orange-yellow | ||
PPV | PPV | poly(p-phenylene vinylene) | yellow-green | ||
PPV | poly(2,5-dialkoxy) paraphenylene vinylene | ||||
PPV | poly[(1,4-phenylene-1,2-diphenylvinylene)] | green | |||
PPV | MDMO-PPV | poly(3',7'-dimethyloctyloxy phenylene vinylene) | red | ||
PPP | Polyparaphenylene | ||||
LPPP | ladder-type polyparaphenylene | ||||
PPS | Polyparaphenylene sulphide | ||||
PHT | polyheptadiyne | ||||
P3HT | Poly(3-hexylthiophene) | ||||
Poly(3-octylthiophene) | red | ||||
Poly(3-cyclohexylthiophene) | green | ||||
Poly(3-methyl-4-cyclohexylthiophene) | blue | ||||
PANI | Polyaniline | ||||
PPE | Poly(2,5-dialkoxy-1,4-phenyleneethynylene) | yellow | |||
Poly(2-decyloxy-1,4-phenylene) | 410 nm (dark blue) | ||||
PFO | Poly(9,9-dioctylfluorene) | blue | |||
Polyquinoline | blue |
See also
References
- ↑ Heeger, Alan J. (2001). "Semiconducting and Metallic Polymers: The Fourth Generation of Polymeric Materials†". The Journal of Physical Chemistry B. 105 (36): 8475–8491. ISSN 1520-6106. doi:10.1021/jp011611w.
- ↑ Pei, Qibing (2007). "Light-Emitting Polymers". sigmaaldrich.com. SigmaAldrich. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
- ↑ McCullough, Richard D.; Tristram-Nagle, Stephanie; Williams, Shawn P.; Lowe, Renae D.; Jayaraman, Manikandan (1993). "Self-orienting head-to-tail poly(3-alkylthiophenes): new insights on structure-property relationships in conducting polymers". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 115 (11): 4910. doi:10.1021/ja00064a070.
This article is issued from
Wikipedia.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.