研究目的
Investigating the impact of nanostructuration of gold-titania composites on their photocatalytic performance for CO2 reduction to methane under solar and visible light, focusing on the role of metal dispersion, interface accessibility, and plasmon-induced effects.
研究成果
The study demonstrates that nanostructuration of Au-TiO2 composites significantly influences photocatalytic CO2 reduction. Crystallinity of titania and accessibility of Au-TiO2 interface are key for activity and selectivity. Plasmon-induced processes enhance visible light activity with high methane selectivity, but are limited by charge generation. Pre-calcining TiO2 at 450°C optimizes performance, achieving up to 100% selectivity under visible light.
研究不足
The plasmon-based process contributes only up to 20% of solar activity, limited by charge generation efficiency. High gold loading or further optimization may be needed to enhance performance. The study focuses on monometallic systems; bimetallic or other modifications were not explored.
1:Experimental Design and Method Selection:
The study involves preparing gold-titania composites via colloidal deposition, varying Au nanoparticle size and titania calcination temperatures to control nanostructuration. Photocatalytic tests are conducted under solar and visible light to evaluate CO2 reduction performance.
2:Sample Selection and Data Sources:
Samples include Au/TiO2 composites with different Au sizes (3 nm, 15 nm, 50 nm) and calcination treatments (pre- and post-calcination at 450°C, 700°C, 900°C). Data from characterization techniques (TEM, XRD, UV-vis, BET) and photocatalytic activity measurements are used.
3:List of Experimental Equipment and Materials:
Equipment includes a Micromeritics Asap 2420 porosimeter for BET, Bruker D8 Advance diffractometer for XRD, JEOL 2100F microscope for TEM, Perkin Elmer Lambda 950 Scan spectrophotometer for UV-vis, TRMC setup for charge carrier dynamics, and a photocatalytic reactor with Hg lamp. Materials include TiO2 UV100, HAuCl4, NaBH4, CO2 gas, and water.
4:Experimental Procedures and Operational Workflow:
Synthesis involves reducing HAuCl4 with NaBH4 to form gold sol, adsorbing onto TiO2, drying, and calcining. Photocatalytic tests involve depositing catalyst on glass disk, purging with CO2/H2O mixture, irradiating, and analyzing products with micro-GC.
5:Data Analysis Methods:
Data analyzed using BET method for surface area, TEM for particle size distribution, XRD for crystallinity, UV-vis for optical properties, TRMC for charge carrier lifetimes, and production rates calculated from GC data.
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Diffractometer
D8 Advance
Bruker
Used for X-ray diffraction to analyze crystallinity and phase composition of materials.
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Microscope
2100F
JEOL
Used for transmission electron microscopy to observe nanoparticle size and distribution.
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Spectrophotometer
Lambda 950 Scan
Perkin Elmer
Used for UV-visible absorption spectroscopy to study optical properties.
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Micro-GC
3000A SRA
Agilent
Used for online analysis of gaseous products from photocatalytic reactions.
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Filter
GG420
SCHOTT
Used to cut off irradiation below 420 nm for visible light experiments.
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Porosimeter
Asap 2420
Micromeritics
Used for nitrogen adsorption-desorption isotherms to determine BET surface area and pore characteristics.
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Lamp
Ceramic-Metal-Halide Hg Lamp
Used as light source for photocatalytic tests, simulating solar light.
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Titania
UV100
Sachtleben Chemie GmbH
Used as the semiconductor support in photocatalysts.
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Gold Colloid
Econix Au nanospheres
nanoComposix
Used as source of gold nanoparticles for composite preparation.
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