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dc.contributor.author FERNÁNDEZ OTERO, TORIBIO
dc.contributor.author MARTINEZ BERNAL, JOSE GUADALUPE
dc.contributor.author Fuchiwaki, Masaki
dc.contributor.author VALERO CONZUELO, LAURA
dc.creator Fernández Otero, Toribio
dc.creator Martínez, Jose G.
dc.creator Fuchiwaki, Masaki
dc.creator Valero Conzuelo, Laura
dc.creator FERNÁNDEZ OTERO, TORIBIO;;3181197
dc.creator MARTINEZ BERNAL, JOSE GUADALUPE; 10083
dc.creator Fuchiwaki, Masaki;#0000-0002-9990-4960
dc.creator VALERO CONZUELO, LAURA;;3181150
dc.date.accessioned 2016-02-29T16:27:03Z
dc.date.available 2016-02-29T16:27:03Z
dc.date.issued 2013-10-31
dc.identifier.issn 1616-3028
dc.identifier.uri http://ri.uaemex.mx/handle/123456789/32905
dc.description.abstract Free-standing polypyrrole films, being the metal–polymer contact located several millimeters outside the electrolyte, give stationary closed coulovoltammetric (charge/potential) loop responses to consecutive potential sweeps from –2.50 V to 0.65 V in aqueous solutions. The continuous and closed charge evolution corroborates the presence of reversible film reactions (electroactivity), together high electronic and ionic conductivities in the full potential range. The closed charge loop demonstrates that the irreversible hydrogen evolution is fully inhibited from aqueous solutions of different salts up to –2.5 V vs Ag/AgCl. The morphology of the closed charge loops shows abrupt slope changes corresponding to the four basic components of the structural electrochemistry for a 3D electroactive gel: reduction-shrinking, reduction-compaction, oxidation-relaxation, and oxidation-swelling. Freestanding films of conducting polymers behave as 3D gel electrodes (reactors) at the chain level, where reversible electrochemical reactions drive structural conformational and macroscopic (volume variation) changes. Very slow hydrogen evolution is revealed by coulovoltammetric responses at more cathodic potentials than –1.1 V from strong acid solutions, or in neutral salts self-supported blend films of polypyrrole with large organic acids. Conducting polymers overcome graphite, mercury, lead, diamond, or carbon electrodes as hydrogen inhibitors, and can compete with them for some electro-analytical and electrochemical applications in aqueous solutions. es
dc.language.iso eng es
dc.publisher Advanced Functional Materials
dc.relation.ispartofseries 24;9
dc.rights openAccess
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
dc.subject Electrochemistry
dc.subject Polypyrrole
dc.subject Hydrogen
dc.subject Aqueous Solutions
dc.subject.classification BIOLOGÍA Y QUÍMICA
dc.title Structural Electrochemistry from Freestanding Polypyrrole Films: Full Hydrogen Inhibition from Aqueous Solutions es
dc.type Artículo es
dc.provenance Científica
dc.road Dorada
dc.ambito Nacional es
dc.audience students
dc.audience researchers
dc.type.conacyt article
dc.identificator 2


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  • Título
  • Structural Electrochemistry from Freestanding Polypyrrole Films: Full Hydrogen Inhibition from Aqueous Solutions
  • Autor
  • FERNÁNDEZ OTERO, TORIBIO
  • MARTINEZ BERNAL, JOSE GUADALUPE
  • Fuchiwaki, Masaki
  • VALERO CONZUELO, LAURA
  • Fecha de publicación
  • 2013-10-31
  • Editor
  • Advanced Functional Materials
  • Tipo de documento
  • Artículo
  • Palabras clave
  • Electrochemistry
  • Polypyrrole
  • Hydrogen
  • Aqueous Solutions
  • Los documentos depositados en el Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México se encuentran a disposición en Acceso Abierto bajo la licencia Creative Commons: Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivar 4.0 Internacional (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)

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