Hierarchical assembly of immobilized TiO2-based nanostructured epitaxial films on Ti Substrates for photocatalytic water decontamination and hydrogen generation

This PhD thesis primarily involved the hierarchical assembly of immobilized TiO2-based epitaxial crystalline thin film photocatalysts that are anchored and grown directly from crystalline Ti substrates. The synthesized novel photocatalysts featuring various nanostructures presented herein include na...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ng, Jiawei
Other Authors: Sun Delai, Darren
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/51037
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-51037
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-510372023-03-03T19:19:57Z Hierarchical assembly of immobilized TiO2-based nanostructured epitaxial films on Ti Substrates for photocatalytic water decontamination and hydrogen generation Ng, Jiawei Sun Delai, Darren School of Civil and Environmental Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Environmental engineering::Water treatment This PhD thesis primarily involved the hierarchical assembly of immobilized TiO2-based epitaxial crystalline thin film photocatalysts that are anchored and grown directly from crystalline Ti substrates. The synthesized novel photocatalysts featuring various nanostructures presented herein include nanotubes, nanowhiskers, nanowires, nanofungus and nanocubes. The different morphologies have imparted various functionalities and also tailor surface- and shaped-induced properties of semiconductor nanocrystalline phase. The increased surface area and reactive sites also resulted in a consistently higher activity for surface-based processes such as heterogeneous photocatalysis. The developed photocatalysts were employed to degrade recalcitrant, emerging contaminants and pathogens that are commonly present in water bodies (AO7, E. coli cells and BPA) via production of photogenerated holes and oxidative radicals. The free electrons produced from photocatalytic reduction half-reactions are harvested and utilized for the reduction of hydroxide ions present in the treated water to generate hydrogen gas, a source of clean energy. DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (ENV.SC. and ENG.) 2013-01-03T03:22:17Z 2013-01-03T03:22:17Z 2012 2012 Thesis Ng, J. (2012). Hierarchical assembly of immobilized TiO2-based nanostructured epitaxial films on Ti Substrates for photocatalytic water decontamination and hydrogen generation. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/51037 10.32657/10356/51037 en 233 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Environmental engineering::Water treatment
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Environmental engineering::Water treatment
Ng, Jiawei
Hierarchical assembly of immobilized TiO2-based nanostructured epitaxial films on Ti Substrates for photocatalytic water decontamination and hydrogen generation
description This PhD thesis primarily involved the hierarchical assembly of immobilized TiO2-based epitaxial crystalline thin film photocatalysts that are anchored and grown directly from crystalline Ti substrates. The synthesized novel photocatalysts featuring various nanostructures presented herein include nanotubes, nanowhiskers, nanowires, nanofungus and nanocubes. The different morphologies have imparted various functionalities and also tailor surface- and shaped-induced properties of semiconductor nanocrystalline phase. The increased surface area and reactive sites also resulted in a consistently higher activity for surface-based processes such as heterogeneous photocatalysis. The developed photocatalysts were employed to degrade recalcitrant, emerging contaminants and pathogens that are commonly present in water bodies (AO7, E. coli cells and BPA) via production of photogenerated holes and oxidative radicals. The free electrons produced from photocatalytic reduction half-reactions are harvested and utilized for the reduction of hydroxide ions present in the treated water to generate hydrogen gas, a source of clean energy.
author2 Sun Delai, Darren
author_facet Sun Delai, Darren
Ng, Jiawei
format Theses and Dissertations
author Ng, Jiawei
author_sort Ng, Jiawei
title Hierarchical assembly of immobilized TiO2-based nanostructured epitaxial films on Ti Substrates for photocatalytic water decontamination and hydrogen generation
title_short Hierarchical assembly of immobilized TiO2-based nanostructured epitaxial films on Ti Substrates for photocatalytic water decontamination and hydrogen generation
title_full Hierarchical assembly of immobilized TiO2-based nanostructured epitaxial films on Ti Substrates for photocatalytic water decontamination and hydrogen generation
title_fullStr Hierarchical assembly of immobilized TiO2-based nanostructured epitaxial films on Ti Substrates for photocatalytic water decontamination and hydrogen generation
title_full_unstemmed Hierarchical assembly of immobilized TiO2-based nanostructured epitaxial films on Ti Substrates for photocatalytic water decontamination and hydrogen generation
title_sort hierarchical assembly of immobilized tio2-based nanostructured epitaxial films on ti substrates for photocatalytic water decontamination and hydrogen generation
publishDate 2013
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/51037
_version_ 1759855309972570112