Issue 21, 2017

The structural impact of water sorption on device-quality melanin thin films

Abstract

The melanins are a class of pigmentary bio-macromolecules ubiquitous in the biosphere. They possess an intriguing set of physico-chemical properties and have been shown to exhibit hybrid protonic–electronic electrical conductivity, a feature derived from a process termed chemical self-doping driven by the sorption of water. Although the mechanism underlying the electrical conduction has been established, how the sorbed water interacts with the melanin structure at the physical level has not. Herein we use neutron reflectometry to study changes in the structure of synthetic melanin thin films as a function of H2O and D2O vapour pressure. Water is found to be taken up evenly throughout the films, and by employing the contrast effect, the existence of labile protons through reversible deuterium exchange is demonstrated. Finally, we determine a sorption isotherm to enable quantification of the melanin–water interactions.

Graphical abstract: The structural impact of water sorption on device-quality melanin thin films

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
26 Oct 2016
Accepted
05 May 2017
First published
15 May 2017

Soft Matter, 2017,13, 3954-3965

The structural impact of water sorption on device-quality melanin thin films

A. J. Clulow, A. B. Mostert, M. Sheliakina, A. Nelson, N. Booth, P. L. Burn, I. R. Gentle and P. Meredith, Soft Matter, 2017, 13, 3954 DOI: 10.1039/C6SM02420C

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