Abstract

The study of titanium dioxide (TiO2) in the brookite phase is gaining popularity as evidence has shown the efficient photocatalytic performance of this less investigated polymorph. It has been recently reported that defective anisotropic brookite TiO2 nanorods display remarkable substrate-specific reactivity towards alcohol photoreforming, with rates of hydrogen production significantly (18-fold) higher than those exhibited by anatase TiO2 nanoparticles. To elucidate the basic photo-physical mechanisms and peculiarities leading to such an improvement in the photoactive efficiency, we investigated the recombination processes of photoexcited charge carriers in both stoichiometric and reduced brookite nanorods via photoluminescence excitation spectroscopy in controlled environment. Through an investigation procedure employing both supragap and subgap excitation during successive exposure to oxidizing and reducing gaseous agents, we firstly obtained an interpretation scheme describing the main photoluminescence and charge recombination pathways in stoichiometric and reduced brookite, which includes information about the spatial and energetic position of the intragap states involved in photoluminescence mechanisms, and secondly identified a specific photoluminescence enhancement process occurring in only reduced brookite nanorods, which indicates the injection of a conduction band electron during ethanol photo-oxidation. The latter finding may shed light on the empirical evidence about the exceptional reactivity of reduced brookite nanorods toward the photo-oxidation of alcohols and the concomitant efficiency of photocatalytic hydrogen generation.

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