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Probing Oxide Reduction and Phase Transformations at the Au-TiO2 Interface by Vibrational Spectroscopy

2017-8-17, Pougin, Anna, Lüken, Alexander, Klinkhammer, Christina, Hiltrop, Dennis, Kauer, Max, Tölle, Katharina, Havenith-Newen, Martina, Morgenstern, Karina, Grünert, Wolfgang, Muhler, Martin, Strunk, Jennifer

By a combination of FT-NIR Raman spectroscopy, infrared spectroscopy of CO adsorption under ultrahigh vacuum conditions (UHV-IR) and Raman spectroscopy in the line scanning mode the formation of a reduced titania phase in a commercial Au/TiO2 catalyst and in freshly prepared Au/anatase catalysts was detected. The reduced phase, formed at the Au-TiO2 interface, can serve as nucleation point for the formation of stoichiometric rutile. TinO2n−1 Magnéli phases, structurally resembling the rutile phase, might be involved in this process. The formation of the reduced phase and the rutilization process is clearly linked to the presence of gold nanoparticles and it does not proceed under similar conditions with the pure titania sample. Phase transformations might be both thermally or light induced, however, the colloidal deposition synthesis of the Au/TiO2 catalysts is clearly ruled out as cause for the formation of the reduced phase.

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Room temperature synthesis of an amorphous MoS2 based composite stabilized by N-donor ligands and its light-driven photocatalytic hydrogen production

2015, Niefind, Felix, Djamil, John, Bensch, Wolfgang, Srinivasan, Bikshandarkoil R., Sinev, Ilya, Grünert, Wolfgang, Deng, Mao, Kienle, Lorenz, Lotnyk, Andriy, Mesch, Maria B., Senker, Jürgen, Dura, Laura, Beweries, Torsten

Herein an entirely new and simple room temperature synthesis of an amorphous molybdenum sulfide stabilized by complexing ammonia and hydrazine is reported. The resulting material exhibits an outstanding activity for the photocatalytic hydrogen evolution driven by visible light. It is chemically stable during the reaction conditions of the photocatalysis and shows unusual thermal stability up to 350 °C without crystallization. The new material is obtained by a reaction of solid ammonium tetrathiomolybdate and gaseous hydrazine. In the as-prepared state Mo atoms are surrounded by μ2-briding S2−, NH3 and hydrazine, the latter being coordinated to Mo(IV) in a bridging or side-on mode. Heating at 450 °C or irradiation with an electron beam generates nanosized crystalline MoS2 slabs. The two modes for crystallization are characterized by distinct mechanisms for crystal growth. The stacking of the slabs is low and the material exhibits a pronounced turbostratic disorder. Heat treatment at 900 °C yields more ordered MoS2 but structural disorder is still present. The visible-light driven hydrogen evolution experiments evidence an outstanding performance of the as-prepared sample. The materials were thoroughly characterized by optical spectroscopy, chemical analysis, in situ HRTEM, XRD, 1H and 15N solid-state NMR, XPS, and thermal analysis.