Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7824092 | Polymer Degradation and Stability | 2018 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
The effect of thermal treatment on the morphology (crystalline phase and size) and photocatalytic activity of freshly prepared TiO2 nano-powder is communicated. TiO2 nano-powders, prepared by hydrolyzing titanium tetraisopropoxide at room temperature, were all dried at 382â¯K and subsequently calcined at different temperatures, for 1â¯h, up to 1172â¯K. Raman analysis of each thermally treated sample exhibited different titania phase structures. Up to 772â¯K a mixture of brookite and anatase phases was observed, while a mixture of all three phases, i.e. anatase, brookite and rutile, was observed at 872â¯K, with a rutile only phase at 1097â¯K and above. The photocatalytic activity of all samples was assessed by means of the photocatalytic degradation of methyl orange dye (MeO). All anatase-brookite compositions exhibited high photocatalytic activity with the rate of degradation decreasing with increasing calcination temperature, which coincides with (i) a slight increase of the anatase phase, (ii) a slight decrease of the brookite phase, and (iii) a gradual increase of the crystallite size of all phases. The greatest photocatalytic activity was observed for the sample calcined at 382â¯K, which contained the highest amount of brookite (in the presence of anatase as the dominant phase), while the lowest rate was observed for the pure rutile sample.
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Authors
Norman S. Allen, Noredine Mahdjoub, Vladimir Vishnyakov, Peter J. Kelly, Roelof J. Kriek,