Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5368267 | Applied Surface Science | 2010 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Titanium dioxide nanoparticles in distilled H2O solvent were prepared by laser ablation. The experiments were performed irradiating a Ti target with a second harmonic (532Â nm) output of a Nd:YAG laser varying the operative fluence between 1 and 10Â JÂ cmâ2 and for an ablation time ranging from 10 to 30Â min. Electron microscopy measurements have evidenced the predominant presence of nanoparticles with diameter smaller than 10Â nm together with agglomerations of 100-200Â nm whose content increases with the laser fluence. At low laser fluence the particles' size distribution shows that more than 85% of the nanoparticles have a size smaller than 5Â nm while at mid and high fluences the presence of 5-7Â nm nanoparticles is predominant. XPS analysis has revealed the presence of different titanium suboxide phases with the prevalence of Ti-O bonds from TiO2 species. The optical bandgap values, determined by UV-vis absorption measurements, are compatible with the anatase phase.
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Authors
F. Barreca, N. Acacia, E. Barletta, D. Spadaro, G. Currò, F. Neri,