Conductivity spectra of polyphosphazene-based polyelectrolyte multilayers

J Phys Chem B. 2007 Jul 26;111(29):8532-9. doi: 10.1021/jp068872w. Epub 2007 May 3.

Abstract

Polyelectrolyte multilayers are built up from ionically modified polyphosphazenes by layer-by-layer assembly of a cationic (poly[bis(3-amino-N,N,N-trimethyl-1-propanaminium iodide)phosphazene] (PAZ+) and an anionic poly[bis(lithium carboxylatophenoxy)phosphazene] (PAZ-). In comparison, multilayers of poly(sodium 4-styrenesulfonate) (PSS) and poly(allylamine hydrochloride) (PAH) are investigated. Frequency-dependent conductivity spectra are taken in sandwich geometry at controlled relative humidity. Conductivity spectra of ion-conducting materials generally display a dc plateau at low frequencies and a dispersive regime at higher frequencies. In the present case, the dispersive regime shows a frequency dependence, which is deviating from the typical behavior found in most ion-conducting materials. Dc conductivity values, which can be attributed to long-range ionic transport, are on the order of sigmadc = 10-10-10-7 S.cm-1 and strongly depend on relative humidity. For PAZ+/PAZ- multilayers sigmadc is consistently larger by one decade as compared to PSS/PAH layers, while the humidity dependence is similar, pointing at general mechanisms. A general law of a linear dependence of log(sigmadc) on relative humidity is found over a wide range of humidity and holds for both multilayer systems. This very strong dependence was attributed to variations of the ion mobility with water content, since the water content itself is not drastically dependent on humidity.