Photocatalytic activity of TiO nanoparticles is highly dependent on their phase composition. The coexistence of anatase and rutile phases in a single nanoparticle eases the electron transfer process between the phases, and favors the separation of photogenerated pairs. In this work, highly photoactive mixed-phase TiO nanostructures were prepared by supercritical antisolvent precipitation (SAS), an environmentally friendly technology. It is shown here that this methodology has the remarkable ability to produce highly porous (515 m/g) and crystalline TiO nanoparticles. The phase composition of as-prepared TiO samples can be tailored through annealing process. Several mixed-phase TiO samples were tested to assess the correlation between photocatalytic activity and phase composition. The photocatalytic performance is strongly affected by the anatase-rutile ratio, since the synergism between phases enhances the charge separation, reducing the recombination effect of the photogenerated pairs (e/h). It was found that the nanocatalyst composed by 7.0 wt% of rutile phase and 93.0 wt% of anatase phase, named as TiO_650, presented the highest photodegradation for both methyl orange (MO) and methylene blue (MB) dyes. Interestingly, TiO samples prepared by SAS have superior photoactivity than the benchmark photocatalyst names as P25, which is a widely used TiO material composed of anatase and rutile phases.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jcis.2018.09.098DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

phase composition
16
photocatalytic activity
12
tio samples
12
composition photocatalytic
8
supercritical antisolvent
8
tio nanoparticles
8
anatase rutile
8
rutile phases
8
photogenerated pairs
8
mixed-phase tio
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!