Abstract
Carbon modified titanium dioxide (TiO 2 ) is a promising candidate for catalytic applications or fuel cells, where the modified oxide could replace currently used catalyst support materials. Carbothermally treated TiO 2 was successfully prepared by annealing under acetylene/nitrogen gas flow in a rotary tube furnace. The carbon content in the TiO 2 samples ranged from 5 to 14.5 wt.‐% as determined by thermogravimetric measurements. The powders showed suppression of the phase transition from anatase to rutile up to a treatment temperature of 825°C. Above 600°C rutile is the thermodynamically stable phase, therefore the suppression must be attributed to either carbon in the lattice or the reducing atmosphere in the furnace. Raman spectra revealed the characteristic G and D bands, indicating the formation of carbonaceous species in the samples. In addition, a shift of the anatase E g(1) band was observed indicating a lattice disorder pointing toward carbon incorporation into the lattice. Diffuse reflectance spectra show sub band gap absorption together with a shift of the absorption edge. Depending on the extraction method of band gaps from spectra, the band gap values show a decrease or increase with increasing carbon content. Details of the evaluation and interpretation of the spectra are discussed.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Eitel, D., Graml, J., Hoppe, J., Kaliwoda, M., Hornfeck, M., & Helbig, U. (2023). Synthesis and Structure of Carbon‐doped TiO 2 by Carbothermal Treatment. Nano Select, 4(7), 454–461. https://doi.org/10.1002/nano.202300022
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