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Coating of uniform inorganic particles with polymers: III. Polypyrrole on different metal oxides

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2011

Chin-Lin Huang*
Affiliation:
Center for Advanced Materials Processing, Clarkson University, Box 5814, Potsdam, New York 13699-5814
Egon Matijevic*
Affiliation:
Center for Advanced Materials Processing, Clarkson University, Box 5814, Potsdam, New York 13699-5814
*
a)On leave from China Steel Corporation, Kaohsiung, Taiwan, Republic of China.
b) Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
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Abstract

Five kinds of uniform metal oxide particles (α-Fe2O3, CeO2, CuO, NiO, and SiO2) were coated with polypyrrole by reacting the dispersed solids with pyrrole in a water/ethanol medium without the use of a soluble oxidant. When the process was carried out in air, all particles were coated with the polymer, although the thickness of the layer varied on different cores. In CuO dispersions, independent polypyrrole particles were produced in addition to coated spheres. While oxygen is the major oxidant that initiates the polymerization of pyrrole, some metal oxides may also affect the reaction both in terms of the amount and the composition of the shell. Thus, α-Fe2O3 and SiO2 were found to be inactive in the polymerization, while CeCh and CuO react with the adsorbed pyrrole molecules through a reductive-dissolution process, in which the monomers are oxidized, causing a release of reduced metal ions.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 1995

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