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            Chapter Ultra-Thin Plasma-Polymerized Functional Coatings for Biosensing: Polyacrylic Acid, Polystyrene and Their Co-Polymer

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            Author(s)
            Castellino, Micaela
            Rivolo, Paola
            Ricciardi, Serena
            Frascella, Francesca
            Language
            English
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            Abstract
            The photocatalytic properties of titanium dioxide have been widely studied over recent decades since the discovery of water photolysis by TiO2 electrodes in 1972. Titanium dioxide has three main crystal polymorphs; anatase, rutile and brookite and rutile is the most common as the metastable polymorph. Each polymorph has different band gap positions. Anatase’s band gap is 3.2 eV, higher than rutile’s which is 3.0 eV. This difference in the band gap will determine their optimum UV wavelength range to promote a photocatalytic process. There are different methods to assess the photocatalytic activity of a material. The most commonly used method is the degradation of a dye in aqueous solution under UV light, due to its simplicity. Under these conditions the decomposition rate of a suitable organic dye is used as a measure of activity. Physical properties such as particle size and surface area will determine the effective area that will interact and absorb the dye prior to degradation. The physical mechanisms involved in such aqueous based methods differ from gas phase reactions. More advanced techniques use mass spectrometers to evaluate photocatalytic activity of titanium dioxide in the gas phase. An effective photocatalyst for heterogeneous reactions in the gas phase is one which is efficient at creating radicals as a result of an absorbed photon.
            URI
            https://doab-dev.siscern.org/handle/20.500.12854/196105
            Keywords
            photocatalysis, UV irradiation, nitrogen dioxide, methylene blue reduction, mass spectrometer
            DOI
            10.5772/62899
            Publisher
            InTechOpen
            Publication date and place
            2016
            Classification
            Condensed matter physics (liquid state & solid state physics)
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              This project received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 871069.

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