Abstract
Quantitative assessments of electron and hole transfer dynamics with water on anatase nanocrystalline TiO2 films were conducted by employing a series of transient absorption spectrometers. For water reduction reactions, both conduction band and trapped electrons decay with two different single exponential components with the difference in time scale of 6∼7 orders of magnitudes. The faster reaction occurs in 8–16 ns, while the slower component shows a lifetime of 0.1∼1.4 s. Pt nanoparticle deposition on the TiO2 surface switches the slower single exponential reaction to a stretched exponential with an accelerated half lifetime of 2–7 ms, indicating that this slower reaction is limited by the electron trapping-detrapping movements inside the TiO2. Water oxidation reactions occur multi-exponentially from 100 ns to 200 ms with a half lifetime of 10 μs. Pt on the TiO2 surface catalyses water oxidation, occurring from 25 ns with a half lifetime of 8 μs.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Article number | 120226 |
Journal | Applied Catalysis B: Environmental |
Volume | 296 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2021 Nov 5 |
Externally published | Yes |
Subject classification (UKÄ)
- Materials Chemistry
Free keywords
- Photocatalysis
- TiO
- Transient absorption spectroscopy
- Water oxidation
- Water reduction