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Journal ArticleDOI

The Role of Metal Ion Dopants in Quantum-Sized TiO2: Correlation between Photoreactivity and Charge Carrier Recombination Dynamics

Wonyong Choi, +2 more
- 22 Dec 1994 - 
- Vol. 98, Iss: 51, pp 13669-13679
TLDR
In this article, the presence of metal ion dopants in the TiO_2 crystalline matrix significantly influences photoreactivity, charge carrier recombination rates, and interfacial electron-transfer rates.
Abstract
A systematic study of metal ion doping in quantum (Q)-sized (2-4 nm) TiO_2 colloids is performed by measuring their photoreactivities and the transient charge carrier recombination dynamics. The presence of metal ion dopants in the TiO_2 crystalline matrix significantly influences photoreactivity, charge carrier recombination rates, and interfacial electron-transfer rates. The photoreactivities of 21 metal ion-doped colloids are quantified in terms of both the conduction band electron reduction of an electron acceptor (CCl_4 dechlorination) and the valence band hole oxidation of an electron donor (CHCl_3 degradation). Doping with Fe^(3+), Mo^(5+), Ru^(3+), Os^(3+), Re^(5+), V^(4+), and Rh^(3+) at 0.1-0.5 at.% significantly increases the photoreactivity for both oxidation and reduction while Co^(3+) and Al^(3+) doping decreases the photoreactivity. The transient absorption signals upon laser flash photolysis (λ_(ex) = 355 nm) at λ = 600 nm are extended up to 50 ms for Fe^(3+)-, V^(4+)-, Mo^(5+)-, and Ru^(3+)-doped TiO_2 while the undoped Q-sized TiO_2 shows a complete "blue electron" signal decay within 200 μs. Co^(3+)- and Al^(3+)-doped TiO_2 are characterized by rapid signal decays with a complete loss of absorption signals within 5 μs. The quantum yields obtained during CW photolyses are quantitatively correlated with the measured transient absorption signals of the charge carriers. Photoreactivities are shown to increase with the relative concentration of trapped charge carriers. The photoreactivity of doped TiO_2 appears to be a complex function of the dopant concentration, the energy level of dopants within the TiO_2 lattice, their d electronic configuration, the distribution of dopants, the electron donor concentration, and the light intensity.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Efficient degradation of dye pollutants on nanoporous polyoxotungstate–anatase composite under visible-light irradiation

TL;DR: In this paper, a photocatalyst, nanoporous anatase TiO 2 crystalline particles coupled by homogeneously dispersed Keggin unit, H 3 PW 12 O 40 /TiO 2, was prepared by a simple and rapid process, i.e., at a lower temperature (200°C) by combined sol-gel and programmed temperature hydrothermal methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deep-level optical spectroscopy investigation of N-doped TiO2 films

TL;DR: In this paper, N-doped TiO2 films were deposited on n+-GaN∕Al2O3 substrates by reactive magnetron sputtering and subsequently crystallized by annealing at 550 °C in flowing N2 gas.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visible-light-driven nitrogen-doped TiO2 photocatalysts: effect of nitrogen precursors on their photocatalysis for decomposition of gas-phase organic pollutants

TL;DR: In this paper, a spray pyrolysis from a mixed aqueous solution containing TiCl4 and an N-precursor (urea, guanidine, or ammonium fluoride) was used to synthesize N-doped TiO2 powders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unique Surface Chemical Species on Indium Doped TiO2 and Their Effect on the Visible Light Photocatalytic Activity

TL;DR: The surface state energy level attributed to the surface O−In−Clx species was located at 0.3 eV below the conduction band of TiO2 as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pure and modified TiO2 photocatalysts and their environmental applications

TL;DR: In this article, the characteristics of TiO2, the most popular photocatalyst, is briefly described and selected studies on the degradation/conversion of various recalcitrant pollutants using pure and modifiedTiO2 photocatalysts, which were carried out in this group, are reviewed.
References
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Book

Inorganic Chemistry: Principles of Structure and Reactivity

TL;DR: In this article, inorganic chemistry principles of structure and reactivity are presented. But, they do not cover how to use these principles in the design of products, and they are not available in any type of product.
Book

Transition Metal Oxides: An Introduction to Their Electronic Structure and Properties

P. A. Cox
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a chemical aspects structural principles of electronic classification and models of electronic structure: ionic models cluster models band theory intermediate models, point-defects and semiconduction, electronic carrier properties.
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