posted on 2020-11-12, 16:17authored byYifan Xu, Teng Fern Tay, Lingling Cui, Jiajie Fan, Chunyao Niu, Dehong Chen, Zheng Xiao Guo, Chenghua Sun, Xiao Li Zhang, Rachel A. Caruso
Fluorination
is an effective way of tuning the physicochemical
property and activity of TiO2 nanocrystallites, which usually
requires a considerable amount of hydrofluoric acid (or NH4F) for a typical F/Ti molar ratio, RF, of 0.5–69.0 during synthesis. This has consequential environmental
issues due to the high toxicity and hazard of the reactants. In the
present work, an environmentally benign fluorination approach is demonstrated
that uses only a trace amount of sodium fluoride with an RF of 10–6 during synthesis. While it
maintained the desirable high surface area (102.4 m2/g),
the trace-level fluorination enabled significant enhancements on photocatalytic
activities (e.g., a 56% increase on hydrogen evolution rate) and heavy
metal Pb(II) removal (31%) of the mesoporous TiO2. This
can be attributed to enriched Ti3+ and localized spatial
charge separation due to fluorination as proved by X-ray photoelectron
spectroscopy (XPS), electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy (EPR),
and density functional theory (DFT) analyses.