Abstract

Different amounts of graphene oxide were chemically reduced with hydrazine in the presence of nanometric TiO2 and SiO2. The photocatalytic performance of the resulting hybrid materials was compared with pristine supports using phenol and methylene blue (MB) under two different irradiation conditions (UV–vis and Vis only light). MB is strongly adsorbed on the hybrid materials. Significant MB degradation rates were observed on pristine TiO2 and hybrid TiO2-reduced graphene oxide (rGO) material under both irradiation conditions. In the presence of the hybrid catalyst, the degradation of MB under Vis is due to the dye-sensitized mechanism, while under UV–vis there is an additional semiconductor-based photocatalytic mechanism. Conversely, the presence of rGO reduces the rate of photocatalytic transformation for the poorly adsorbed phenol under UV irradiation, and a negligible degradation rate was observed under Vis.The UV–vis absorption spectra of aqueous suspensions of hybrid materials with different rGO loading indicate a strong interaction of the two materials and a reduction of the light absorption due to the presence of rGO. Among many mechanisms reported on the role of rGO, it is inferred that the working mechanism involves electron transfer from photoexcited states of rGO onto the titania, and holes migration from titania to rGO, where adsorbed substrates are oxidized. This oxidation is possible only if the substrate HOMO has higher energy (less positive standard redox potential) than the empty states of excited rGO, supposedly for MB and not for phenol. Then, reduced graphene is advantageous when substrates are adsorbed and when the charge separation is possible (coupled with a proper semiconductor like TiO2). Alone, or coupled with low work function oxides like SiO2, rGO could be ineffective.

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