4.6 Article

Hierarchical, Titania-Coated, Carbon Nanofibrous Material Derived from a Natural Cellulosic Substance

Journal

CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL
Volume 16, Issue 26, Pages 7730-7740

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/chem.201000436

Keywords

biomimetic synthesis; carbon; nanostructures; supported catalysts; titanium dioxide

Funding

  1. National Key Project on Basic Research of China [2009CB930104]
  2. Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [R2080061]
  3. Chinese Universities Scientific Fund [2009QNA3009]
  4. Qianjiang Talent Program of Zhejiang Province, China [2009R10013]

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Hierarchical, titania-coated, nanofibrous, carbon hybrid materials were fabricated by employing natural cellulosic substances (commercial filter paper) as a scaffold and carbon precursor. Ultrathin titania films were firstly deposited by means of a surface sol gel process to coat each nanofiber in the filter paper, and successive calcination treatment under nitrogen atmosphere yielded the titania carbon composite possessing the hierarchical morphologies and structures of the initial paper. The ultrathin titania coating hindered the coalescence effect of the carbon species that formed during the carbonization process of cellulose, and the original cellulose nanofibers were converted into porous carbon nanofibers (diameters from tens to hundreds of nanometers, with 3-6 nm pores) that were coated with uniform anatase titania thin films (thickness approximate to 12 nm, composed of anatase nanocrystals with sizes of approximate to 4.5 nm). This titania-coated, nanofibrous, carbon material possesses a specific surface area of 404 m(2)g(-1), which is two orders of magnitude higher than the titania-cellulose hybrid prepared by atomic layer deposition of titania on the cellulose fibers of filter paper. The photocatalytic activity of the titania carbon composite was evaluated by the improved photodegradalion efficiency of different dyes in aqueous solutions under high-pressure, fluorescent mercury-lamp irradiation, as well as the effective photoreduction performance of silver cations to silver nanoparticles with ultraviolet irradiation.

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