4.3 Article

Photo-Chlorine Production with Hydrothermally Grown and Vacuum-Annealed Nanocrystalline Rutile

Journal

ELECTROCATALYSIS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages 65-77

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12678-020-00630-x

Keywords

Disinfection; Brine; Field effects; Hydrothermal growth; Oxygen vacancies; Solar energy

Funding

  1. China Scholarship Council [201809350006, 201809350005]

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Photo-generated high-energy surface states can assist in the production of chlorine in aqueous environments. Aligned rutile nanocrystal arrays grown on fluorine-doped tin oxide substrates and activated by hydrothermal Sr/Ba surface doping and/or vacuum-annealing exhibit highly photoactive properties, leading to efficient photoelectrochemical chlorine production. Vacuum-annealing is suggested to enhance semiconductor TiO2 nanocrystal properties, surface reactivity, and substrate performance.
Photo-generated high-energy surface states can help to produce chlorine in aqueous environments. Here, aligned rutile (TiO2) nanocrystal arrays are grown onto fluorine-doped tin oxide (FTO) substrates and activated either by hydrothermal Sr/Ba surface doping and/or by vacuum-annealing. With vacuum-annealing, highly photoactive films are obtained with photocurrents of typically 8 mA cm(-2) at 1.0 V vs. SCE in 1 M KCl (LED illumination with lambda = 385 nm and approx. 100 mW cm(-2)). Photoelectrochemical chlorine production is demonstrated at proof-of-concept scale in 4 M NaCl and suggested to be linked mainly to the production of Ti(III) surface species by vacuum-annealing, as detected by post-catalysis XPS, rather than to Sr/Ba doping at the rutile surface. The vacuum-annealing treatment is proposed to beneficially affect (i) bulk semiconductor TiO2 nanocrystal properties and electron harvesting, (ii) surface TiO2 reactivity towards chloride adsorption and oxidation, and (iii) FTO substrate performance.

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