Novel composite materials synthesized by the high-temperature interaction of pyrrole with layered oxide matrices
Abstract
The initial goal of the research presented herein was to develop the very first
synthetic metal – high-temperature superconductor ceramic composite material, in the
specific form of a polypyrrole - Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ nanocomposite. In the course of
scientific investigation, this scope was broadened to encompass structurally and
compositionally similar layered bismuthates and simpler layered oxides. The latter
substrates were prepared through novel experimental procedures that enhanced the
chance of yielding nanostructured morphologies. The designed novel synthesis
approaches yielded a harvest of interesting results that may be further developed upon
their dissemination in the scientific community.
High-temperature interaction of pyrrole with molybdenum trioxide substrates with
different crystalline phases and morphologies led to the formation of the first members of
a new class of heterogeneous microcomposites characterized by incomplete occupancy
by the metal oxide core of the volume encapsulated by the rigid, amorphous permeable
polymeric membrane that reproduces the volume of the initial grain of precursor
substrate. The method may be applied for various heterogeneous catalyst substrates for
the precise determination of the catalytically active crystallographic planes.
In a different project, room-temperature, templateless impregnation of
molybdenum trioxide substrates with different crystalline phases and morphologies by a
large excess of silver (I) cations led to the formation of 1-D nanostructured novel Ag-MoO
ternary phase in what may be the simplest experimental procedure available to date
that has yielded a 1-D nanostructure, regardless the nature of the constituent material.
Interaction of this novel ternary phase with pyrrole vapors at high reaction temperatures
led to heterogeneous nanostructured composites that exhibited a silver nanorod core.
Nanoscrolls of vanadium pentoxide xerogel were synthesized through a novel,
facile reflux-based method that employed very acidic pH levels and long reaction times.
The nanoscrolls proved to be an excellent precursor for the synthesis of reduced
vanadium oxide nanosheets by the redox intercalation of long chain monoamine
molecules.
In a related development, the very first synthetic metal – mixed-valence
polyoxovanadate salt hybrid material was synthesized in the form of a polypyrrole –
tetrammonium hexavanadate microcomposite by a redox simultaneous co-precipitation in
an aqueous solution. The novel material displayed good mechanical properties towards
solid lubricant applications and tunable electronic conductivity.
Nanocomposites of polypyrrole – layered bismuthates were produced by the
topotactic intercalation of pyrrole and its subsequent in situ polymerization. Insulating
and superconducting layered bismuthates were used in a similar experimental procedure
that used pre-intercalated iodine species as sacrificial topotactic oxidizing agents. A novel
method of iodine intercalation by a solution-based transport procedure was used in the
process.
Interaction of pyrrole with layered bismuthates at high reaction temperatures led
to the formation of polymer-covered metal nanorods as a result of intrinsic lattice
templating effect. The successful synthesis of the 1-D heterogeneous nanostructures
represents the first example in which nanocomposites were used as precursors.
Appropriate doping of the initial layered ceramic substrates led to polymer-covered metal
alloy nanorods.