Abstract

In addition to its traditional application in white pigments, nanocrystalline titania (TiO2) has optoelectronic and photocatalytic properties (strongly dependent on crystallinity, particle size, and surface structure) that grant this naturally occurring oxide new technological applications. Sol-gel is one of the most widely used methods to synthesize TiO2 films and NPs, but the products obtained (mostly oxy-hydrated amorphous phases) require severe heat-treatments to promote crystallization, in which control over size and shape is difficult to achieve. In this work, we obtained new photocatalytic materials based on amorphous titania and measured their electronic band gap. Two case studies are reported that show the enormous potential of amorphous titania as bactericide or photocatalyst. In the first, amorphous sol-gel TiO2 thin films doped with N (TiO2−xNx, x = 0.75) were designed to exhibit a photonic band gap in the visible region. The identification of Ti-O-N and N-Ti-O bindings was achieved by XPS. The photonic band gaps were found to be 3.18 eV for a-TiO2 and 2.99 eV for N-doped a-TiO2. In the second study, amorphous titania and amine-functionalized amorphous titania nanoparticles were synthetized using a novel base-catalysed sol-gel methodology. All the synthesized amorphous TiO2 nanoparticles exhibit bactericide performance (E. coli, ASTME 2149-13).

Highlights

  • Since its commercial production in the early 20th century, titanium dioxide (TiO2 ) has been used in metallurgy and in white pigments in formulations such as paints, toothpastes, ointments, cosmetics, and sunscreens, due to its intense whiteness and purity ([1] and references within)

  • 350 ◦ C) are, respectively, 3.18 eV, 2.99 eV, and 3.13 eV. These results show that amorphous pure and N-doped TiO2 films exhibit a band gap slightly smaller than anatase (3.2 eV)

  • We observed the same behavior for amorphous titania films

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Summary

Introduction

Since its commercial production in the early 20th century, titanium dioxide (TiO2 ) has been used in metallurgy and in white pigments in formulations such as paints, toothpastes, ointments, cosmetics, and sunscreens, due to its intense whiteness and purity ([1] and references within). It was the discovery of photocatalytic splitting of water on a TiO2 electrode under ultraviolet light (UV). Molecules 2018, 23, x FOR PEER REVIEW oxidation of carbon monoxide, metal corrosion prevention, sensoring are some of the actions that TiO2 canphotodegradation efficiently perform based on the strong power ofofTiO. [25,26]

Titania Structure
Electronic
Titania
Titania Photocatalytic Activity
Titania Case Studies
Band Gap of Amorphous
Conclusions
Case Study 1
Case Study 2
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