| Literature DB >> 35540772 |
Xiaodong Zhu1,2, Shihu Han2, Wei Feng1,3, Qingquan Kong1,3, Zhihong Dong1, Chenxi Wang1, Jiahao Lei1, Qian Yi1.
Abstract
Sn-doped TiO2 nanomaterials with different amounts of Sn (1, 2.5, 5, 10, and 15 at%) were prepared by a sol-gel method and characterized by XRD, TG, DTA, EDS, XPS, DRS, SEM, BET, and PL. The photocatalytic activity of the prepared samples was investigated by measuring the degradation of rhodamine B in aqueous solution under UV light. The experimental results indicate that doping with Sn promotes phase transformation from anatase to rutile. The photocatalytic activity of TiO2 is influenced by both the heat treatment temperature and the Sn doping concentration. 1% Sn-TiO2 exhibits the highest degradation rate at 350 °C and 5% Sn-TiO2 exhibits the best photocatalytic activity at 500 °C and 650 °C. The enhancement of the photocatalytic activity can be ascribed to a larger surface area and a better hydration ability, as well as less recombination of the photogenerated pairs. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 35540772 PMCID: PMC9079907 DOI: 10.1039/c8ra00766g
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1XRD patterns of pure TiO2 and Sn–TiO2 annealed at 350 °C (a), 500 °C (b), and 650 °C (c).
Crystal structure and crystallite size of all the TiO2 nanomaterials
| Temperature | Sample | Crystal structure | Crystallite size/nm |
|---|---|---|---|
| 350 °C | Pure TiO2 | Anatase | 15.7 |
| 1% Sn–TiO2 | Anatase | 12.0 | |
| 2.5% Sn–TiO2 | Anatase | 13.7 | |
| 5% Sn–TiO2 | Anatase | 11.3 | |
| 10% Sn–TiO2 | Anatase | 10.3 | |
| 15% Sn–TiO2 | Anatase | 10.8 | |
| 500 °C | Pure TiO2 | Anatase | 19.0 |
| 1% Sn–TiO2 | Anatase | 15.0 | |
| 2.5% Sn–TiO2 | Anatase (84.4 wt%)/rutile (15.6 wt%) | 14.6/35.6 | |
| 5% Sn–TiO2 | Anatase (89.2 wt%)/rutile (10.8 wt%) | 13.5/20.8 | |
| 10% Sn–TiO2 | Anatase (49.7 wt%)/rutile (50.3 wt%) | 14.0/15.1 | |
| 15% Sn–TiO2 | Anatase (61.8 wt%)/rutile (38.2 wt%) | 17.6/12.1 | |
| 650 °C | Pure TiO2 | Anatase (20.2 wt%)/rutile (79.8 wt%) | 25.8/36.9 |
| 1% Sn–TiO2 | Anatase (18.2 wt%)/rutile (81.8 wt%) | 27.0/42.3 | |
| 2.5% Sn–TiO2 | Rutile | 35.9 | |
| 5% Sn–TiO2 | Anatase (6.8 wt%)/rutile (93.2 wt%) | 23.7/34.0 | |
| 10% Sn–TiO2 | Rutile | 28.5 | |
| 15% Sn–TiO2 | Rutile | 26.5 |
Fig. 2TG and DTA curves for pure TiO2 and 10% Sn–TiO2.
Fig. 3EDS spectrum of 5% Sn–TiO2 annealed at 500 °C.
Fig. 4The total spectra of pure TiO2 and 5% Sn–TiO2 annealed at 500 °C.
Fig. 5(a) UV-vis diffuse reflectance absorption spectra of pure TiO2 and Sn–TiO2 annealed at 500 °C. (b) Optical band gap of pure TiO2 and Sn–TiO2.
Fig. 6SEM images of pure TiO2 (a) and 5% Sn–TiO2 (b) annealed at 500 °C.
The BET surface area of the pure TiO2 and Sn–TiO2 samples annealed at 500 °C
| Sample | BET surface area (m2 g−1) |
|---|---|
| Pure TiO2 | 2.9 |
| 1% Sn–TiO2 | 13.8 |
| 5% Sn–TiO2 | 54.4 |
| 15% Sn–TiO2 | 61.2 |
Fig. 7Photoluminescence spectra of pure TiO2 and Sn–TiO2 annealed at 500 °C.
Fig. 8Photocatalytic degradation of RhB for pure TiO2 and Sn–TiO2 annealed at 350 °C (a), 500 °C (b), and 650 °C (c).
Fig. 9First-order reaction rate constant k against reaction time for different photocatalysts annealed at 350 °C (a), 500 °C (b), and 650 °C (c).