Bj. Aronson et al., SOLUTION-PHASE GRAFTING OF TITANIUM-DIOXIDE ONTO THE PORE SURFACE OF MESOPOROUS SILICATES - SYNTHESIS AND STRUCTURAL CHARACTERIZATION, Chemistry of materials, 9(12), 1997, pp. 2842-2851
Titanium dioxide, a large-bandgap semiconductor and versatile photocat
alyst, has been grafted onto the pore surface of MCM-41 and FSM-16 (a
mesoporous material derived from kanemite) by reacting TiCl4 in hexane
s with the as-synthesized mesostructured silicate. The products have b
een extensively characterized by powder XRD, TEM, SEM, EDS, XPS, N-2 a
dsorption, SANS contrast matching, solid-state H-1 MAS NMR, IR, and UV
-vis spectroscopies. It was found that titania forms well-dispersed is
olated (TiO2)(n) clusters (n similar to 30-70) within the channel stru
cture. These are attached to the silicate walls via Si-O-Ti bonds. A m
inor second phase consisting of anatase crystallites ca. 100-250 Angst
rom in diameter on the external surface of the mesoporous silicate cry
stals was sometimes obtained. It is concluded that an organic moiety,
such as the surfactant present in the pores, or a physical constraint,
such as the pore walls, is necessary to prevent the creation of large
TiO2 agglomerates and enable the formation of nanosized TiO2 clusters
. The titania-grafted MCM-41 samples exhibited good catalytic activity
for photobleaching of rhodamine-6G and for oxidation of alpha-terpine
ol; however, product selectivity was low.