Carbon-Ti nanocomposites were prepared by a controlled two-step method using microcrystalline cellulose as a raw material. The synthesis procedure involves the solubilization of cellulose by an acid treatment (HPO or HNO) and the impregnation with the Ti precursor followed of a carbonization step at 500 or 800 °C. The type of acid treatment leads to a different functionalization of cellulose with phosphorus- or oxygen-containing surface groups, which are able to control the load, dispersion and crystalline phase of Ti during the composite preparation. Thus, phosphorus functionalities lead to amorphous carbon-Ti composites at 500 °C, while TiPO crystals are formed when prepared at 800 °C. On the contrary, oxygenated groups induce the formation of TiO rutile at an unusually low temperature (500 °C), while an increase of carbonization temperature promotes a progressive crystal growth. The removal of Orange G (OG) azo dye in aqueous solution, as target pollutant, was used to determine the adsorptive and photocatalytic efficiencies, with all composites being more active than the benchmark TiO material (Degussa P25). Carbon-Ti nanocomposites with a developed micro-mesoporosity, reduced band gap and TiO rutile phase were the most active in the photodegradation of OG under ultraviolet irradiation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano10040729 | DOI Listing |
Talanta
January 2025
School of Electronic Information Engineering, Changchun University of Science and Technology, Changchun, Jilin, 130022, PR China. Electronic address:
Herein, the few-layer TiCT nanosheets loaded zeolitic imidazolate framework-67 nanoplates (TiCT-ZIF-67) with a unique structure has been synthesized by surfactant control method, and then is employed as the core of precursor. A thin layer of polydopamine as the shell of precursor covered TiCT-ZIF-67 forms a micro-nano reactor, leading to the confinement carbonization process. Consequently, a novel sensing material that few-layer TiCT nanosheets loaded Co nanoparticles coated N-doped carbon (TiCT-Co@NC) is obtained for the non-enzymatic determination of glucose.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanomaterials (Basel)
April 2020
Carbon Materials Research Group, Department of Inorganic Chemistry, Faculty of Sciences, University of Granada, Avda, Fuente Nueva, s/n. ES18071 Granada, Spain.
Carbon-Ti nanocomposites were prepared by a controlled two-step method using microcrystalline cellulose as a raw material. The synthesis procedure involves the solubilization of cellulose by an acid treatment (HPO or HNO) and the impregnation with the Ti precursor followed of a carbonization step at 500 or 800 °C. The type of acid treatment leads to a different functionalization of cellulose with phosphorus- or oxygen-containing surface groups, which are able to control the load, dispersion and crystalline phase of Ti during the composite preparation.
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