Abstract

Photoconductivity and trap-related decay were investigated in porous TiO2/ZnO nanocomposites. Photoconductivity responses of TiO2 and ZnO were completely different, which were attributed to electron-scavenging effect and hole trapping effect, respectively. When the mole ratio of TiO2:ZnO was from 9:1 to 6:4, the photoconductivity responses were consistent with TiO2. On the contrary, when the mole ratio of TiO2:ZnO was from 4:6 to 1:9, the photoconductivity responses were controlled by ZnO. Time constants were obtained by fitting the experiment data with an exponential function. We found that they tended to get larger with the percentage of ZnO while a turning point appeared at TiO2:ZnO = 1:9. The pattern was assigned to different carrier trapping mechanisms as well as carrier separation. Composition effect was defined by a quantitative formula to evaluate the recombination processes of composite materials. A mechanism was proposed to explain this phenomenon.

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