Abstract

An Ag/TiO2 coating was deposited onto glazed ceramic tiles by a sol-gel and spraying method at high temperatures. The coating was characterized by X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, and atomic force microscopy. The results showed that silver was present in rutile-TiO2, and the temperature did not change the phase composition of the samples. The Ag/TiO2 coating had a higher roughness than the TiO2 coating. The tape test (D 3359–08) showed that the coatings prepared at 950 °C and 1000 °C had good adhesion to the ceramic tile substrate. The antibacterial activity of the coating was tested by photocatalytic sterilization experiments. The results showed that the Ag/TiO2 coating had a higher antibacterial activity than the TiO2 coating, and the sterilization efficiency of Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Shigella, and Salmonella exceeded 99.655% under 2 h of visible light irradiation. This research provides a method to create Ag/TiO2 coatings with good thermal resistance, adhesion, and antibacterial activity. This improves the low photocatalytic activity caused by the anatase-to-rutile transformation of TiO2 at high temperatures and the poor adhesion at low temperatures.

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