Engineering of conjugated microporous polymers (CMPs) with high porosity, redox activity, and electronic conductivity is of significant importance for their practical applications in electrochemical energy storage. Aminated-multiwall carbon nanotubes (NH -MWNT) are utilized to modulate the porosity and electronic conductivity of polytriphenylamine (PTPA), which is synthesized via Buchwald-Hartwig coupling reaction of tri(4-bromophenyl)amine and phenylenediamine as constitutional units in a one-step in situ polymerization process. Compared to PTPA, the specific surface area of core-shell PTPA@MWNTs has been greatly improved from 32 to 484 m g .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStretchable organohydrogel fibers are attracting considerable interest for next-generation flexible and wearable soft strain sensors due to their excellent stability in harsh environments. However, due to the uniformly distributed ions and reduced number of carriers in the whole material, the sensitivity of organohydrogel fibers under subzero temperature is not desirable, which significantly hinders their practical application. Herein, a newly competitive proton-trapping strategy was designed to obtain anti-freezing organohydrogel fibers for high-performance wearable strain sensors a simple freezing-thawing process, in which tetraaniline (TANI), serving as the proton trapper, and representing the shortest repeated structural unit of polyaniline (PANI), was physically crosslinked with polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) (PTOH).
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