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Summary polymers for advanced technology

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This subject provides a comprehensive understanding of high-performance and functional polymers tailored for advanced engineering and industrial applications. It explores the chemical structure, synthesis, and specialized properties of polymers that demonstrate exceptional resistance, responsiveness, and adaptability under extreme conditions. The course begins with an in-depth study of temperature and fire-resistant polymers, such as fluoropolymers, aromatic polymers, polysulphides, polyesters, polyamides, polyimides, polyketones, heterocyclic polymers, and polysiloxanes. These materials are critically important in aerospace, automotive, electronics, and high-temperature environments due to their thermal stability and flame retardance. Further, the syllabus introduces ionic polymers and liquid crystalline polymers (LCPs), highlighting their synthesis, hydrophilicity, ion-exchange capacities, and applications in membranes and sensors. Emphasis is placed on ionomers derived from polystyrene, polyethylene, PTFE, and polyaromatic backbones, as well as on the role of polyelectrolytes and polymer-ion complexes in bioengineering and electrochemical applications. A major focus of the subject is on conducting polymers and their technological relevance. This includes polymers that are photo-conductive, piezoelectric, pyroelectric, and ferroelectric—materials essential for the development of sensors, actuators, non-linear optical devices, and smart electronics. Characterization techniques such as cyclic voltammetry, chronoamperometry, and chronocoulometry are also introduced to analyze the electrochemical properties of these advanced materials. The subject further explores real-world applications, including the use of conductive polymers in microelectronics, corrosion protection, electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding, rechargeable batteries, light-emitting devices (LEDs), artificial muscles, and electrochromic displays. Lastly, the course covers polymer-based concrete systems like Polymer Concrete (PC), Polymer-Portland Cement Concrete (PPCC), and Polymer Impregnated Concrete (PIC), addressing their manufacturing processes, material properties, mixing methods, and diverse structural applications. Through this integrated study, students gain the theoretical knowledge and practical foundation required for innovation in polymer science, with a focus on high-performance materials in advanced technologies.

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Conducting Mechanisms - Conductivity in Inorganic Semiconductors

• The nature of the processes that induce high conductivity in polymers is different from those
inorganic semiconductors. In the doping of inorganic semiconductors such as silicon, the
species occupies positions within the lattice of the host material, resulting in the formation o
electron rich or electron-deficient sites with no charge transfer occurring between the sites.

• The doping reaction in polymers, on the other hand, is a charge-transfer reaction, resulting in the
oxidation or reduction of the polymer, rather than the creation of holes.

, Conducting Mechanisms - Conductivity in Inorganic Semiconductors

The doping process in the case of conducting polymers may therefore be more
correctly classified as redox processes of the following general scheme

• The exposure of polyacetylene to an oxidizing agent X (or reducing agent M) leads to the formation of a
positively (or negatively) charged polymeric complex and of a counterion which is the reduced X- (or the
oxidized M+) form of the oxidant (or the reductant).

• The doping process in the case of conducting polymers classified as redox process

Polymer + X = (polymer)n+ + Xn --
Where X = I2, Br2, AsF5 in the case of an oxidation
Polymer + M = (polymer)n-- + Mn +
Where M= Na, Li in the case of reduction
• The above reactions are most likely to occur in the case of unsaturated polymers with π electrons as they
be easily removed from the polymeric chains to form polycations or added to the chains to form polyanion

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