Abstract

Titania powders were synthesized by nonhydrolitic sol–gel process starting from titanium(IV)-chloride, titanium(IV)-isopropoxide and carbon-tetrachloride. Gelation was performed in solvothermal conditions, at 140°C or 160°C. The obtained gels were then dried and calcined at 500°C or 750°C.Dry gels and powders obtained by their calcination at 500°C contained only anatase, and the degree of crystallinity increased notably on passing from the dry gels to the powders. The crystallite size of dry gels and powders obtained at 500°C increased slightly with increasing temperature of the gelation. The powder obtained at the higher gelation temperature had a larger specific surface area (52.8m2g−1) and a smaller maximum pore diameter (12.3nm). When the calcination temperature was increased to 750°C, the obtained powders contained both anatase and rutile. The rutile content in the powders is related to the degree of crystallinity of the dry gels: with a lower level of dry gel crystallinity, the rutile content in the powders becomes higher, indicating that the temperature of the anatase→rutile transformation decreases with decreasing the size of anatase crystallites. The photocatalytic activity of the powders obtained by gel calcination at 500°C, tested by measuring the photocatalytic degradation of the azo dye CI Reactive orange 16, was sufficiently high and attained the photocatalytic activity of the broadly accepted commercial powder P-25 produced by Degussa. The photocatalytic activity of the powders obtained by calcination at 750°C was low, but showed a tendency to increase with higher anatase content in the powders.

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