Cargando…

Selective suppression of {112} anatase facets by fluorination for enhanced TiO(2) particle size and phase stability at elevated temperatures

Generally, anatase is the most desirable TiO(2) polymorphic phase for photovoltaic and photocatalytic applications due to its higher photoconductivity and lower recombination rates compared to the rutile phase. However, in applications where temperatures above 500 °C are required, growing pure anata...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kohlrausch, Emerson C., dos Reis, Roberto, Lodge, Rhys W., Vicente, Isabel, Brolo, Alexandre G., Dupont, Jairton, Alves Fernandes, Jesum, Santos, Marcos. J. L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: RSC 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9419165/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36133950
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1na00528f
_version_ 1784777117279453184
author Kohlrausch, Emerson C.
dos Reis, Roberto
Lodge, Rhys W.
Vicente, Isabel
Brolo, Alexandre G.
Dupont, Jairton
Alves Fernandes, Jesum
Santos, Marcos. J. L.
author_facet Kohlrausch, Emerson C.
dos Reis, Roberto
Lodge, Rhys W.
Vicente, Isabel
Brolo, Alexandre G.
Dupont, Jairton
Alves Fernandes, Jesum
Santos, Marcos. J. L.
author_sort Kohlrausch, Emerson C.
collection PubMed
description Generally, anatase is the most desirable TiO(2) polymorphic phase for photovoltaic and photocatalytic applications due to its higher photoconductivity and lower recombination rates compared to the rutile phase. However, in applications where temperatures above 500 °C are required, growing pure anatase phase nanoparticles is still a challenge, as above this temperature TiO(2) crystallite sizes are larger than 35 nm which thermodynamically favors the growth of rutile crystallites. In this work, we show strong evidence, for the first time, that achieving a specific fraction (50%) of the {112} facets on the TiO(2) surface is the key limiting step for anatase-to-rutile phase transition, rather than the crystallite size. By using a fluorinated ionic liquid (IL) we have obtained pure anatase phase crystallites at temperatures up to 800 °C, even after the crystallites have grown beyond their thermodynamic size limit of ca. 35 nm. While fluorination by the IL did not affect {001} growth, it stabilized the pure anatase TiO(2) by suppressing the formation of {112} facets on anatase particles. By suppressing the {112} facets, using specific concentrations of fluorinated ionic liquid in the TiO(2) synthesis, we controlled the anatase-to-rutile phase transition over a wide range of temperatures. This information shall help synthetic researchers to determine the appropriate material conditions for specific applications.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9419165
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher RSC
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-94191652022-09-20 Selective suppression of {112} anatase facets by fluorination for enhanced TiO(2) particle size and phase stability at elevated temperatures Kohlrausch, Emerson C. dos Reis, Roberto Lodge, Rhys W. Vicente, Isabel Brolo, Alexandre G. Dupont, Jairton Alves Fernandes, Jesum Santos, Marcos. J. L. Nanoscale Adv Chemistry Generally, anatase is the most desirable TiO(2) polymorphic phase for photovoltaic and photocatalytic applications due to its higher photoconductivity and lower recombination rates compared to the rutile phase. However, in applications where temperatures above 500 °C are required, growing pure anatase phase nanoparticles is still a challenge, as above this temperature TiO(2) crystallite sizes are larger than 35 nm which thermodynamically favors the growth of rutile crystallites. In this work, we show strong evidence, for the first time, that achieving a specific fraction (50%) of the {112} facets on the TiO(2) surface is the key limiting step for anatase-to-rutile phase transition, rather than the crystallite size. By using a fluorinated ionic liquid (IL) we have obtained pure anatase phase crystallites at temperatures up to 800 °C, even after the crystallites have grown beyond their thermodynamic size limit of ca. 35 nm. While fluorination by the IL did not affect {001} growth, it stabilized the pure anatase TiO(2) by suppressing the formation of {112} facets on anatase particles. By suppressing the {112} facets, using specific concentrations of fluorinated ionic liquid in the TiO(2) synthesis, we controlled the anatase-to-rutile phase transition over a wide range of temperatures. This information shall help synthetic researchers to determine the appropriate material conditions for specific applications. RSC 2021-09-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9419165/ /pubmed/36133950 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1na00528f Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Kohlrausch, Emerson C.
dos Reis, Roberto
Lodge, Rhys W.
Vicente, Isabel
Brolo, Alexandre G.
Dupont, Jairton
Alves Fernandes, Jesum
Santos, Marcos. J. L.
Selective suppression of {112} anatase facets by fluorination for enhanced TiO(2) particle size and phase stability at elevated temperatures
title Selective suppression of {112} anatase facets by fluorination for enhanced TiO(2) particle size and phase stability at elevated temperatures
title_full Selective suppression of {112} anatase facets by fluorination for enhanced TiO(2) particle size and phase stability at elevated temperatures
title_fullStr Selective suppression of {112} anatase facets by fluorination for enhanced TiO(2) particle size and phase stability at elevated temperatures
title_full_unstemmed Selective suppression of {112} anatase facets by fluorination for enhanced TiO(2) particle size and phase stability at elevated temperatures
title_short Selective suppression of {112} anatase facets by fluorination for enhanced TiO(2) particle size and phase stability at elevated temperatures
title_sort selective suppression of {112} anatase facets by fluorination for enhanced tio(2) particle size and phase stability at elevated temperatures
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9419165/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36133950
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1na00528f
work_keys_str_mv AT kohlrauschemersonc selectivesuppressionof112anatasefacetsbyfluorinationforenhancedtio2particlesizeandphasestabilityatelevatedtemperatures
AT dosreisroberto selectivesuppressionof112anatasefacetsbyfluorinationforenhancedtio2particlesizeandphasestabilityatelevatedtemperatures
AT lodgerhysw selectivesuppressionof112anatasefacetsbyfluorinationforenhancedtio2particlesizeandphasestabilityatelevatedtemperatures
AT vicenteisabel selectivesuppressionof112anatasefacetsbyfluorinationforenhancedtio2particlesizeandphasestabilityatelevatedtemperatures
AT broloalexandreg selectivesuppressionof112anatasefacetsbyfluorinationforenhancedtio2particlesizeandphasestabilityatelevatedtemperatures
AT dupontjairton selectivesuppressionof112anatasefacetsbyfluorinationforenhancedtio2particlesizeandphasestabilityatelevatedtemperatures
AT alvesfernandesjesum selectivesuppressionof112anatasefacetsbyfluorinationforenhancedtio2particlesizeandphasestabilityatelevatedtemperatures
AT santosmarcosjl selectivesuppressionof112anatasefacetsbyfluorinationforenhancedtio2particlesizeandphasestabilityatelevatedtemperatures