Issue 7, 2016

Synthesis of visible and near infrared light sensitive amorphous titania for photocatalytic hydrogen evolution

Abstract

A simple and environmentally safe method of anaerobic hydrolysis was designed to synthesize amorphous TiO2−x containing Ti3+ from the dissolution of Ti0 by water in an anaerobic environment. The disordered arrangement of atoms in amorphous TiO2−x enables it to expand its light absorbing boundary from the ultraviolet to near infrared light region by narrowing its mobility gap to 1.5 eV. As a result, an effective visible and near infrared light photocatalytic hydrogen evolution from water splitting can be achieved by the as-synthesized amorphous TiO2−x with the aid of Ti3+ to inhibit charge recombination. An ideal quantum yield of approximately 4.57% was achieved at a wavelength of 488 nm. This strategy represents a new approach to alter the activity of TiO2, and it is meaningful for achieving green production of artificial clean energy.

Graphical abstract: Synthesis of visible and near infrared light sensitive amorphous titania for photocatalytic hydrogen evolution

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
13 Sep 2015
Accepted
13 Nov 2015
First published
13 Nov 2015

Green Chem., 2016,18, 2056-2062

Synthesis of visible and near infrared light sensitive amorphous titania for photocatalytic hydrogen evolution

J. Jiang, X. Tang, S. Zhou, J. Ding, H. Zhou, F. Zhang, D. Zhang and T. Fan, Green Chem., 2016, 18, 2056 DOI: 10.1039/C5GC02170G

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