Abstract

A new, simple, low-temperature method for the synthesis of superparamagnetic, photocatalytic, nanocomposite particles for applications in the decomposition of pollutants in water is presented. The method is based on the coating of clusters of superparamagnetic maghemite (γ-Fe2O3) nanoparticles with a photocatalytic anatase layer using the hydrolysis of aqueous TiOSO4. The clusters of an appropriate size between 100 and 200 nm form by the simultaneous agglomeration of the aminopropyl-triethoxy-silane-grafted maghemite nanoparticles with a size of approximately 15 nm in a suspension of diluted TiOSO4. During a sudden increase of pH with the addition of NaOH the titania is heterogeneously nucleated at the cluster surfaces. If the hydrolysis was conducted at an elevated temperature of 90 °C, the titania layer was nanocrystalline anatase. The composition of the nanocomposite particles, i.e., the thickness of the anatase layer, can be controlled simply by changing the starting TiOSO4/Fe2O3 ratio for low titania contents, and by multiple coatings to get high titania contents. The photocatalytic activity of the nanocomposites was evaluated in the photocatalytic decomposition of formic acid. The activity seems to increase with an increase in the thickness and the crystallinity of the anatase coating, whereas it decreased after the calcination of the as-synthesized nanocomposite. The coating of the maghemite nanoparticles with a thin layer of insulating silica also slightly improves the photocatalytic activity.

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