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F. Genoud

Warsaw University of Technology

Publishes on Conducting polymers and applications, Analytical Chemistry and Sensors, Organic Electronics and Photovoltaics. 62 papers and 1.9k citations.

62Publications
1.9kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

ESR study of electrochemical doping in the conducting polymer polypyrrole
F. Genoud, Marina Nella Guglielmi, M. Nechtschein et al.|Physical Review Letters|1985
Cited by 221

Steady-state and transient measurements of spin concentration have been carried out as a function of electrochemical charge injection in polypyrrole. A maximum of one spin per \ensuremath{\sim}10 pyrrole units has been observed for about 50% of the maximum charge. The data are interpreted in terms of quasiequilibrium polaron and bipolaron populations resulting from a two-step redox process. Surprisingly, it appears that at low doping levels, bipolaron formation is not favorable compared to formation of two polarons.

Magnetic-resonance studies in undoped<i>trans</i>-polyacetylene<mml:math xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" display="inline"><mml:mrow><mml:msub><mml:mrow><mml:mo>(</mml:mo><mml:mi mathvariant="normal">CH</mml:mi><mml:mo>)</mml:mo></mml:mrow><mml:mrow><mml:mi>x</mml:mi></mml:mrow></mml:msub></mml:mrow></mml:math>. II
M. Nechtschein, F. Devreux, F. Genoud et al.|Physical review. B, Condensed matter|1983
Cited by 160

Magnetic-resonance data in undoped trans-${(\mathrm{CH})}_{x}$, including nuclear relaxation time (${T}_{1}$) measurements versus frequency and ESR linewidth in the temperature range 300---4.2 K, are reported and analyzed. The results are comprehensively explained in terms of highly-one-dimensional diffusive spins which can be trapped in the presence of impurities, or defects, in particular those connected to oxygen contamination. The average number of diffusive spins, as given by the diffusive-spin population at thermal equilibrium, is a function of temperature through two parameters: the trap-site concentration and the trapping energy. Trap-site concentrations of 5% and 25% have been obtained for samples sealed under vacuum and air-contaminated samples, respectively. The trapping energy is found to be distributed, from chain to chain, from a maximum value ${E}_{0}\ensuremath{\simeq}0.06$ eV, which likely corresponds to the chain nearest to ${\mathrm{O}}_{2}$ impurities located at the fibril surface, to about zero for chains far inside the fibril. As the temperature decreases two effects take place, as reflected by the spin-dynamics studies. First, due to the trapping effect, there are fewer and fewer spins in the diffusive state. Second, the diffusion coefficient decreases. Starting from the room-temperature value $\mathcal{D}\ensuremath{\sim}5\ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{}{10}^{\ensuremath{-}3}$ ${\mathrm{cm}}^{2}$/s, the decrease is slow at first then for $T&lt;100$ K seems to obey a power law $\ensuremath{\propto}{T}^{2}$, similarly to a theoretical result derived by Wada and Schrieffer in the case of Brownian motion of domain walls upon two phonon processes. The spin delocalization has been evaluated for the trapped state from ESR, and for the diffusive state from ${T}_{1}$. In both cases the spin density has been found to be delocalized over 10 to 17 CH units. All characteristics and properties determined from the spins in trans-${(\mathrm{CH})}_{x}$ are consistent with the soliton---bond-alternation defect---picture, provided that the trapping effect is taken into account.