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Infrared and Near-Infrared Spectrometry of Anatase and Rutile Particles Bandgap Excited in Liquid.

Zhebin FuHiroshi Onishi
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2022)
Chemical conversion of materials is completed in milliseconds or seconds by assembling atoms over semiconductor photocatalysts. Bandgap-excited electrons and holes reactive on this time scale are key to efficient atom assembly to yield the desired products. In this study, attenuated total reflection of infrared and near-infrared light was applied to characterize and quantify the electronic absorption of TiO 2 photocatalysts excited in liquid. Nanoparticles of rutile or anatase were placed on a diamond prism, covered with liquid, and irradiated by steady UV light through the prism. Electrons excited in rutile particles (JRC-TIO-6) formed small polarons characterized by a symmetric absorption band spread over 10000-700 cm -1 with a maximum at 6000 cm -1 . Electrons in anatase particles (JRC-TIO-7) created large polarons and produced an asymmetric absorption band that gradually strengthened at wavenumbers below 5000 cm -1 and sharply weakened at 1000 cm -1 . The absorption spectrum of large electron polarons in TIO-7 was compared with the absorption reported in a Sr-doped NaTaO 3 photocatalyst, and it was suggested that excited electrons were accommodated as large polarons in NaTaO 3 photocatalysts efficient for artificial photosynthesis. UV-light power dependence of the absorption bands was observed in N 2 -exposed decane liquid to deduce electron-hole recombination kinetics. With light power density P > 200 W m -2 (TIO-6) and 2000 W m -2 (TIO-7), the polaron absorptions were enhanced with absorbance being proportional to P 1/2 . The observed 1/2-order power law suggested recombination of multiple electrons and holes randomly moving in each particle. Upon excitation with smaller P , the power-law order increased to unity. The unity-order power law was interpreted with recombination of an electron and a hole that were excited by the same photon. In addition, an average lifetime of 1 ms was estimated with electron polarons in TIO-6 when weakly excited at P = 20 W m -2 to simulate solar-light irradiation.
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