Surfactant-free polypyrrole (PPy) nanoparticles, which
were colloidally
stable in aqueous medium, were successfully synthesized by coupling
polymerization of pyrrole using Fe(NO3)3 solids
in the absence of any colloidal stabilizer. The pyrrole monomers were
gradually supplied from the vapor phase, and the coupling reaction
of the monomers could proceed to generate PPy in a water medium. The
resulting PPy nanoparticles were extensively characterized in terms
of diameter, bulk chemical composition, surface chemistry, and colloidal
stability by dynamic light scattering, electron microscopy, elemental
microanalysis, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy,
electrophoresis, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The characterization
results indicated that the PPy nanoparticles can be colloidally stable
based on the electrostatic stabilization mechanism due to cationic
charges generated on the PPy molecules by doping during the polymerization.
General chemical oxidative polymerization in aqueous medium using
the Fe(NO3)3 oxidant without a colloidal stabilizer
as a control experiment resulted in generation of atypical PPy aggregates
with over a micrometer size, indicating that the polymerization at
low ionic strength is essential for colloidal particle formation.
Finally, it was demonstrated that the PPy nanoparticles worked as
a surfactant-free black-colored particulate emulsifier by adsorption
at the oil–water interface to stabilize Pickering-type oil-in-water
emulsions.