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Kinetic pathways of sub-bandgap induced electron transfer in Ag/TiO 2 and the effect on isopropanol dehydrogenation under gaseous conditions.

Liping WenBaoshun Liu
Published in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2024)
Electron transfer and its kinetics play a major role in the photocatalysis of metal/semiconductor systems. Using in situ photoconductances, in situ photoabsorption, and photoinduced spectroscopic techniques, the present research aimed to gain a deep insight into electron transfer pathways and their kinetics for Ag/TiO 2 systems under sub-bandgap light illumination and gaseous conditions. The results revealed that electrons generated in TiO 2 can transfer to Ag nanoparticles at fast rates, and plasmon-generated electrons in Ag nanoparticles can also transfer to TiO 2 . However, it was found that plasmon-assisted hot electron transfer efficiency is much lower than the electron transition from the valence band to the conduction band of TiO 2 . Rather than plasmonic active spots, the results showed that Ag nanoparticles acted as co-catalyst sites bridging electron transfer to recombination in a methanol-containing N 2 atmosphere. As a result, photocatalytic isopropanol dehydrogenation was decreased. Independent of Ag decorations, it was also indicated that isopropanol dehydrogenation mainly occurred over TiO 2 surfaces; therefore, Ag nanoparticles did not increase photocatalytic activities. Our results may provide a different viewpoint on sub-bandgap light-induced Ag/TiO 2 photocatalysis under gaseous conditions; this may also facilitate the understanding of the photocatalytic mechanism of metal/semiconductor systems.
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