| Literature DB >> 26515503 |
Muhammad Wajid Shah1,2, Yunqing Zhu1, Xiaoyun Fan1, Jie Zhao1, Yingxuan Li1, Sumreen Asim1,2, Chuanyi Wang1.
Abstract
A facile hydrothermal approach has been developed to prepare defective TiO2-x nanocrystals using Ti(III)-salt as a precursor and L-ascorbic acid as reductant and structure direction agent. The prepared TiO2-x nanocrystals are composed of a highly crystallized TiO2 core and a disordered TiO2-x outer layer, possessing high surface area, controlled oxygen vacancy concentration and tunable bandgap via simply adjusting the amount of added L-ascorbic acid. The defective TiO2-x shows high photocatalytic efficiency in methylene blue and phenol degradation as well as in hydrogen evolution under visible light, underlining the significance of the present strategy for structural and bandgap manipulation in TiO2-based photocatalysis.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26515503 PMCID: PMC4626796 DOI: 10.1038/srep15804
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1XRD patterns (a), TEM images (white TiO2−x(b), brown TiO2−x(c), black TiO2−x(d)), of the defective TiO2−x nanocrystals.
Figure 2N2 adsorption–desorption isotherms (a) and pore size distribution (b) of the defective TiO2−x nanocrystals.
Figure 3EPR (a), XPS (b), Raman (c), and DRS (d) profiles of the defective TiO2−x nanocrystals.
Figure 4Degradation of MB (a) and phenol (b), hydrogen evolution (c) and cycle test (d) of the defective TiO2−x nanocrystals under visible light (>420 nm).
Figure 5Photocurrent (I: white TiO2−x; II: brown TiO2−x; III: black TiO2−x) of the defective TiO2−x nanocrystals under visible light (>420 nm).
Figure 6Schematic diagram for the formation of defective TiO2−x nanocrystals.