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  4. Synthesis and characterization of fluorinated anatase nanoparticles and subsequent N-doping for efficient visible light activated photocatalysis
 
research article

Synthesis and characterization of fluorinated anatase nanoparticles and subsequent N-doping for efficient visible light activated photocatalysis

Milosevic, I.  
•
Rtimi, S.  
•
Jayaprakash, A.
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November 1, 2018
Colloids And Surfaces B-Biointerfaces

Fluorinated-titanium dioxide (TiO2-F) nanoparticles in a pure anatase polymorph was precipitated from solution by hydrolysis of titanium oxychloride, using urea and ammonia as precipitation agents and potassium fluoride as a source of fluorine anion. A further wet attrition milling in presence of glycine completed by a heat treatment allowed an additional nitrogen doping of TiO2 (TiO2-F&N-HT). The morphology and crystalline structure of the as-synthesized powder was determined by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and X-ray diffraction (XRD) and showed that TiO2 powder was composed of nanoparticles with narrow size distribution which crystallized in the anatase phase. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) revealed that fluorine and nitrogen are present in TiO2 as surface fluorination and interstitial doping, respectively. UV-vis diffuse reflectance spectroscopy (DRS) showed an increased optical absorption in the visible for TiO2-F&N-HT sample. Under visible light irradiation, TiO2-F nanoparticles showed a high photocatalytic performance, showing the high potential of an improved surface fluorination for Escherichia coli (E, coli) disinfection in suspension. These results show the importance of anatase-TiO2 nanoparticles synthesis and modification by using a wet chemical approach leading to low aggregation and high specific surface area for effective bacterial inactivation. The co-doped TiO2-F&N-HT powder showed slightly improved performance compared to the fluorinated sample. The significant degree of aggregation after the heat treatment is postulated as being a limiting factor in its photocatalytic activity.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.colsurfb.2018.07.035
Web of Science ID

WOS:000447575400054

Author(s)
Milosevic, I.  
Rtimi, S.  
Jayaprakash, A.
van Driel, B.
Greenwood, B.
Aimable, A.  
Senna, M.
Bowen, P.  
Date Issued

2018-11-01

Published in
Colloids And Surfaces B-Biointerfaces
Volume

171

Start page

445

End page

450

Subjects

Biophysics

•

Chemistry, Physical

•

Materials Science, Biomaterials

•

Chemistry

•

Materials Science

•

tio2

•

anatase

•

fluorination

•

n-doped

•

interstitial

•

aggregation

•

antibacterial

•

photocatalytic

•

doped tio2 nanoparticles

•

antibacterial activity

•

escherichia-coli

•

particle-size

•

nitrogen

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oxidation

•

mechanism

•

facets

•

degradation

•

stability

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
GPAO  
LMC  
Available on Infoscience
December 13, 2018
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/152162
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