Polyaniline (PANI), a conducting polymer, was prepared by the oxidation of aniline with ammonium peroxydisulfate in various aqueous media. When the polymerization was carried out in the solution of strong (sulfuric) acid, a granular morphology of PANI was obtained. In the solutions of weak (acetic or succinic) acids or in water, PANI nanotubes were produced. The oxidation of aniline under alkaline conditions yielded aniline oligomers. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectra of the oxidation products differ. A group of participants from 11 institutions in different countries recorded the FTIR spectra of PANI bases prepared from the samples obtained in the solutions of strong and weak acids and in alkaline medium within the framework of an IUPAC project. The aim of the project was to identify the differences in molecular structure of PANI and aniline oligomers and to relate them to supramolecular morphology, viz. the nanotube formation. The assignment of FTIR bands of aniline oxidation products is reported.
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Publicly AvailablePolyaniline: The infrared spectroscopy of conducting polymer nanotubes (IUPAC Technical Report)June 10, 2011
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Publicly AvailableMorphology development of polytetrafluoroethylene in a polypropylene melt (IUPAC Technical Report)July 14, 2011
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Publicly AvailableDefinitions of terms relating to crystalline polymers (IUPAC Recommendations 2011)August 3, 2011
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Publicly AvailableMetrological traceability of measurement results in chemistry: Concepts and implementation (IUPAC Technical Report)June 15, 2011
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Publicly AvailableExtension of ThermoML: The IUPAC standard for thermodynamic data communications (IUPAC Recommendations 2011)September 7, 2011