The present invention relates to a gold/titanium dioxide core-shell structure, particularly to a method for fabricating a gold/titanium dioxide core-shell structured photocatalyst and an application thereof to photocatalytic decomposition of organic compounds.
At present, the patents of core-shell structured catalysts are almost focused on the structural analysis and application thereof. For an example, a Taiwan patent No. I240009 disclosed a method for synthesizing a metallic core-shell structured nanocomposite particle, which comprises steps: providing several metal salts respectively having different reduction reaction rates, and preparing an aqueous solution of the metal salts; adding a solution of sodium citrate and tannic acid as a reducing agent to the aqueous solution; controlling the reduction reaction to undertake at an appropriate temperature for an appropriate interval of time to make the metal having higher reduction reaction rates form a core and the metals having lower reduction rates and the metals having higher reduction rates jointly form an alloy shell. Thereby is obtained a metallic core-shell structured nanocomposite particle.
For another example, a Taiwan patent No. I264326 disclosed a method for fabricating a metallic core-shell structured nanocomposite functioning as a photocatalyst, which comprises steps: forming a solution of TiO2 nanoparticles; adding to the solution a multi-functional group compound having a first functional group and a second functional group to make the TiO2 nanoparticles join to the first functional groups; and adding metallic nanoparticles to the solution to let the metallic nanoparticles covalently bond with the second functional groups.
Therefore, the conventional technology still has room to improve because it has not so far disclosed the fabrication of the gold/titanium dioxide core-shell structured photocatalyst and the application thereof to the decomposition of organic compounds but only pays attention to the structural analysis and application of core-shell structured catalysts.
The primary objective of the present invention is to provide a method for fabricating a gold/titanium dioxide core-shell structured photocatalyst.
Another objective of the present invention is to provide a method of using a gold/titanium dioxide core-shell structured photocatalyst to fast decompose organic compounds and dyes under ultraviolet irradiation.
To achieve the abovementioned objectives, the present invention proposes a method for fabricating a gold/titanium dioxide core-shell structured photocatalyst, which comprises steps: using a chemical reduction method to fabricate a mixture of gold and titanium dioxide by a ratio of 0.002 to 0.1, wherein a solution of CTAB (cetyltrimethylammonium bromide) is added to a solution of chloroauric acid to form a first solution, and a solution of Vitamin C is dripped into the first solution agitated rapidly at an ambient temperature to form a second solution; slowly dripping an alcohol solution of TTIP (titanium isopropoxide) into the second solution to form a third solution, and agitating the third solution for several minutes to form a suspension liquid containing gold nanoparticles and titanium dioxide nanoparticles; performing a condensate recirculation process on the suspension liquid to maintain the reaction at a temperature of 65-85° C. for 1-3 hours, wherein a condenser is arranged above the reactor to condense the vapor into liquid and recirculate the liquid to the reactor; using a hydrothermal method to heat the suspension liquid to a temperature of 150-200° C. for 8-20 hours to form a powder of a gold/titanium dioxide core-shell structured photocatalyst; centrifugally removing the solvent from the mixture of the powder and the solvent; and baking the powder at a temperature of 30-80° C.
The present invention uses a chemical reduction method to fabricate a gold-titanium dioxide nanocomposite catalyst, wherein gold and titanium dioxide may be mixed by different ratios. The Au@TiO2 nanoparticle of the present invention is fabricated via three steps:
Element analysis: the content of gold is analyzed with ICP-MS (PE-SCIEX ELAN 6100 DRC).
Nanoparticle analysis: the crystalline structure of nanoparticles are analyzed with an X-ray diffractometer (XRD Simens D-500 powder diffractometer with Cu Kα1 radiation) and observed with a transmission electron microscope (TEM JEM-2000 EX II).
The size of the particles of the TiO2 crystal is 8.3 nm (by XRD). The size of the gold nanoparticles is 5-10 nm by TEM.
The content of gold in Au@TiO2 is 0.5 wt % by calculation and 0.48 wt % by ICP-MS.
Curve (c) in
Curve (d) in
Place the Au@TiO2 obtained in the embodiments of fabrication in an aqueous solution of a dye and illuminate the aqueous solution with ultraviolet ray.
The decomposition rate of methylene blue (MB) is defined as follows:
Decomposition rate of MB=MB concentration at a specified time point/original MB concentration
The decomposition rate of methylene blue (MB) is defined as follows:
Decomposition rate of MB=MB concentration at a specified time point/original MB concentration
The decomposition rate of methylene blue (MB) is defined as follows:
Decomposition rate of MB=MB concentration at a specified time point/original MB concentration
The decomposition rate of methylene blue (MB) is defined as follows:
Decomposition rate of MB=MB concentration at a specified time point/original MB concentration
The above experimental results prove that the catalyst fabricated by the present invention can decompose the dye in waste water more effectively than pure TiO2 (gold-free 0.0 wt % Au@TiO2).