1 research outputs found
Role of the Surface Lewis Acid and Base Sites in the Adsorption of CO<sub>2</sub> on Titania Nanotubes and Platinized Titania Nanotubes: An in Situ FT-IR Study
An
understanding of the adsorption of CO<sub>2</sub>, the first
step in its photoreduction, is necessary for a full understanding
of the photoreduction process. As such, the reactive adsorption of
CO<sub>2</sub> on oxidized, reduced, and platinized TiO<sub>2</sub> nanotubes (Ti-NTs) was studied using infrared spectroscopy. The
Ti-NTs were characterized with TEM and XRD, and XPS was used to determine
the oxidation state as a function of oxidation, reduction, and platinization.
The XPS data demonstrate that upon oxidation, surface O atoms become
more electronegative, producing sites that can be characterized as
strong Lewis bases, and the corresponding Ti becomes more electropositive
producing sites that can be characterized as strong Lewis acids. Reduction
of the Ti-NTs produces Ti<sup>3+</sup> species, a very weak Lewis
acid, along with a splitting of the Ti<sup>4+</sup> peak, representing
two sites, which correlate with O sites with a corresponding change
in oxidation state. Ti<sup>3+</sup> is not observed on reduction of
the platinized Ti-NTs, presumably because Pt acts as an electron sink.
Exposure of the treated Ti-NTs to CO<sub>2</sub> leads to the formation
of differing amounts of bidentate and monodentate carbonates, as well
as bicarbonates, where the preference for formation of a given species
is rationalized in terms of surface Lewis acidity and or Lewis basicity
and the availability of hydrogen. Our data suggest that one source
of hydrogen is water that remains adsorbed to the Ti-NTs even after
heating to 350 °C and that reduced platinized NTs can activate
H<sub>2</sub>. Carboxylates, which involve CO<sub>2</sub><sup>–</sup> moieties and are similar to what would be expected for adsorbed
CO<sub>2</sub><sup>–</sup>, a postulated intermediate in CO<sub>2</sub> photoreduction, are also observed but only on the reduced
Ti-NTs, which is the only surface on which Ti<sup>3+</sup>/O vacancy
formation is observed