1. Physical Origin of Diminishing Photocatalytic Efficiency for Recycled TiO2 Nanotubes and Ag-Loaded TiO2 Nanotubes in Organic Aqueous Solution.
- Author
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Wint, Theint Hay Mar, Smith, Michael F., Chanlek, Narong, Chen, Fuming, Oo, Than Zaw, and Songsiriritthigul, Prayoon
- Subjects
AQUEOUS solutions ,NANOTUBES ,X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy ,SURFACE analysis ,METHYLENE blue - Abstract
Arrays of titania nanotubes (TiO
2 NTs) were developed by electrochemical anodization and doped with silver on their surface by photodeposition to achieve TiO2 NTs/Ag. It is found that only anatase TiO2 NTs were formed, with the preferential growth direction perpendicular to the titanium substrate, and with the length and diameter of ~2 µm and 90–120 nm, respectively. The presence of Ag on the surface of TiO2 NTs was also confirmed. The TiO2 NTs and TiO2 NTs/Ag were used as photocatalysts to decolorize the methylene blue (MB) aqueous solution. The photodegradation efficiency (PDE) is as high as 83% for TiO2 NTs and 98% for TiO2 NTs/Ag photocatalysts. This work focused on the investigation of the stability and recyclability of these photocatalysts in terms of efficiency and its physical origin by surface analysis using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). It is found that PDE diminishes from 83% to 76% in TiO2 NTs upon eight recycling runs and from 98% to 80% in TiO2 NTs/Ag upon six recycling runs. The XPS analysis revealed that the physical origin of diminishing efficiency is the carbon contamination on the surface of recycled TiO2 NTs and a combination of carbon contamination and Ag leaching in recycled TiO2 NTs/Ag. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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