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  1. Coupled ionic and electronic transport underpins processes as diverse as electrochemical energy conversion, biological signaling, and soft adaptive electronics. Yet, how chemical environments such as pH modulate this coupling at the molecular scale remains poorly understood. Here, we show that the protonation state of carboxylated polythiophenes provides precise chemical control over ion dynamics, doping efficiency, solvent uptake and mechanical response. Using a suite of multimodal operando techniques, supported by simulations, we reveal that pH dictates the balance of cation/anion uptake during electrochemical doping. Mapping across pH uncovers a quasi–non-swelling regime (≈pH 3–3.5) where charge compensation proceeds with minimal volumetric change yet pronounced stiffening. These findings establish molecular acidity as a general strategy to program ionic preference and mechanical stability, offering design principles for pH-responsive mixed conductors and soft electronic materials that couple ionic, electronic, and mechanical functionality. 
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