화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.111, No.44, 12772-12780, 2007
Amphiphilic azobenzenesulfonic acid anionic surfactant for water-soluble, ordered, and luminescent polypyrrole nanospheres
Self-organized micelles of new renewable resource amphiphilic azobenzenesulfonic acid anionic surfactant were utilized to prepare water-soluble, luminescent, and highly ordered polypyrrole nanomaterials. The micellar behavior of the reaction medium was precisely controlled by varying the composition of pyrrole/surfactant ratio from 3 to 100 (up to 100 times lower amount of surfactant with respect to pyrrole), and polypyrrole nanospheres of 150-800 nm were prepared. Dynamic light scattering (DLS) and viscosity techniques were employed as tools to trace the factors, which control the mechanism of polypyrrole nanomaterials formation. DLS studies confirmed that the surfactant exists as in the form of spherical micelles of 4.8 nm diameter in water. Specific viscosity measurement revealed that the pyrrole+surfactant complexes in water exist in the form of either aggregated or isolated micelles depending upon their composition in the feed. SEM and TEM analysis confirmed that the aggregated micellar templates produced coral-like morphology, whereas uniform polypyrrole nanospheres of 150-400 nm were obtained at low micellar concentration. The nanomaterials formation was unperturbed by the variation of the oxidation agents such as ammonium persulphate (APS) or ferric chloride (FeCl3). WXRD analysis of the nanomaterials indicates that the anionic surfactant effectively penetrates into the polypyrrole chains, and a new peak at 20 = 6.3 degrees (d-spacing = 14 A) was observed corresponding to highly ordered polymer chains. UV-vis and FT-IR confirmed the highly doped state, and the conductivity of the samples was obtained in the range of 10(-1) to 10(-2) S/cm by four-probe conductivity measurements. The azobenzenesulfonic acid anionic surfactant is luminescent in water, and its grafting on the polypyrrole nanospheres enhances the luminescent intensity with the quantum yield in the range of 2 x 10(-3) to 3 x 10(-4).