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  5. Carbon-Doped TiO2 and Carbon, Tungsten-Codoped TiO2 through Sol-Gel Processes in the Presence of Melamine Borate: Reflections through Photocatalysis
 
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Carbon-Doped TiO2 and Carbon, Tungsten-Codoped TiO2 through Sol-Gel Processes in the Presence of Melamine Borate: Reflections through Photocatalysis

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Author(s)
Neville, Elaine M. 
Mattle, Michael J. 
Loughrey, David 
Rajesh, Bashyam 
Rahman, Mahfujur 
MacElroy, J. M. Don 
Sullivan, James A. 
Thampi, Ravindranathan 
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/3981
Date Issued
09 August 2012
Date Available
01T03:00:13Z August 2013
Abstract
A series of C-doped, W-doped, and C,Wcodoped TiO2 samples have been prepared using modified sol-gel techniques. Reproducible inexpensive C-doping arises from the presence of melamine borate in a sol-gel mixture, whereas W-doping is from the addition of tungstic acid to the sol. The materials have been characterized using elemental analysis, N2 physisorption (BET), thermogravimetric analysis, X-ray diffraction, Raman, X-ray photoelectron, UV-vis spectroscopies, and photocatalytic activity measurements. Doping C and W independently results in an increased absorbance in the visible region of the spectrum with a synergistic effect in increased absorbance when both elements are codoped. The increased visible-light absorbance of the W-doped or codoped materials is not reflected in photocatalytic activity. Visiblelight- induced photocatalytic activity of C-doped material was superior to that of an undoped catalyst, paving the way for its application under only visible-light irradiation conditions. A significant fraction of the spectral red shift commonly observed with doped catalysts might be due to the formation of color centers as a result of defects associated with oxygen vacancies, and bandgap-related narrowing or intragap localization of dopant levels are not the only factors responsible for enhanced visible-light absorption in doped photocatalysts. Furthermore, bandgap narrowing through increases in the energy of the valence band may actually decrease photo-oxidation activity through a curtailment of one route of oxidation.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Journal
Journal of Physical Chemistry C
Volume
116
Issue
31
Start Page
16511
End Page
16521
Copyright (Published Version)
2012 American Chemical Society
Keywords
  • TiO2

  • Photocatalysis

  • Band gap engineering

  • Solar energy

DOI
10.1021/jp303645p
Language
English
Status of Item
Not peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
Owning collection
Chemistry Research Collection
Scopus© citations
108
Acquisition Date
Mar 25, 2023
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