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Advanced nanoporous TiO(2) photocatalysts by hydrogen plasma for efficient solar-light photocatalytic application

We report an effect involving hydrogen (H(2))-plasma-treated nanoporous TiO(2)(H-TiO(2)) photocatalysts that improve photocatalytic performance under solar-light illumination. H-TiO(2) photocatalysts were prepared by application of hydrogen plasma of assynthesized TiO(2)(a-TiO(2)) without annealing...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: An, Ha-Rim, Park, So Young, Kim, Hyeran, Lee, Che Yoon, Choi, Saehae, Lee, Soon Chang, Seo, Soonjoo, Park, Edmond Changkyun, Oh, You-Kwan, Song, Chan-Geun, Won, Jonghan, Kim, Youn Jung, Lee, Jouhahn, Lee, Hyun Uk, Lee, Young-Chul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4942796/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27406992
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep29683
Descripción
Sumario:We report an effect involving hydrogen (H(2))-plasma-treated nanoporous TiO(2)(H-TiO(2)) photocatalysts that improve photocatalytic performance under solar-light illumination. H-TiO(2) photocatalysts were prepared by application of hydrogen plasma of assynthesized TiO(2)(a-TiO(2)) without annealing process. Compared with the a-TiO(2), the H-TiO(2) exhibited high anatase/brookite bicrystallinity and a porous structure. Our study demonstrated that H(2) plasma is a simple strategy to fabricate H-TiO(2) covering a large surface area that offers many active sites for the extension of the adsorption spectra from ultraviolet (UV) to visible range. Notably, the H-TiO(2) showed strong ·OH free-radical generation on the TiO(2) surface under both UV- and visible-light irradiation with a large responsive surface area, which enhanced photocatalytic efficiency. Under solar-light irradiation, the optimized H-TiO(2) 120(H(2)-plasma treatment time: 120 min) photocatalysts showed unprecedentedly excellent removal capability for phenol (Ph), reactive black 5(RB 5), rhodamine B (Rho B) and methylene blue (MB) — approximately four-times higher than those of the other photocatalysts (a-TiO(2) and P25) — resulting in complete purification of the water. Such well-purified water (>90%) can utilize culturing of cervical cancer cells (HeLa), breast cancer cells (MCF-7), and keratinocyte cells (HaCaT) while showing minimal cytotoxicity. Significantly, H-TiO(2) photocatalysts can be mass-produced and easily processed at room temperature. We believe this novel method can find important environmental and biomedical applications.