Reductive photocatalysis and smart inks


Autoria(s): Mills, A.; Wells, N.
Data(s)

2015

Resumo

Semiconductor-sensitised photocatalysis is a well-established and growing area of research, innovation and commercialisation; the latter being mostly limited to the use of TiO2 as the semiconductor. Most of the work on semiconductor photocatalytic systems uses oxygen as the electron acceptor and explores a wide range of electron donors; such systems can be considered to be examples of oxidative photocatalysis, OP. OP underpins most current examples of commercial self-cleaning materials, such as: glass, tiles, concrete, paint and fabrics. OP, and its myriad of applications, have been reviewed extensively over the years both in this journal and elsewhere. However, the ability of TiO2, and other semiconductor sensitisers, to promote reductive photocatalysis, RP, especially of dyes, is significant and, although less well-known, is of growing importance. In such systems, the source of the electrons is some easily oxidised species, such as glycerol. One recent, significant example of a RP process is with respect to photocatalyst activity indicator inks. paiis, which provide a measure of the activity of a photocatalytic film under test via the rate of change of colour of the dye in the ink coating due to irreversible RP. In contrast, by incorporating the semiconductor sensitiser in the ink, rather than outside it, it is possible to create an effective UV dosimeter, based on RP, which can be used as a sun-burn warning indicator. In the above examples the dye is reduced irreversibly, but when the photocatalyst in an ink is used to reversibly photoreduce a dye, a novel, colourimetric oxygen-sensitive indicator ink can be created, which has commercial potential in the food packaging industry. Finally, if no dye is present in the ink, and the semiconductor photocatalyst-loaded ink film coats an easily reduced substrate, such as a metal oxide film, then it can be used to reduce the latter and so, for example, clean up tarnished steel. The above are examples of smart inks, i.e. inks that are active and provide either dynamic information (such as UV dose or O2 level) or a useful function (such as tarnish removal), and all work via a RP process and are reviewed here

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/reductive-photocatalysis-and-smart-inks(4a50ea17-55b1-4322-a2cd-d54d65e59379).html

http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c4cs00279b

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Fonte

Mills , A & Wells , N 2015 , ' Reductive photocatalysis and smart inks ' Chemical Society Reviews , vol 44 , pp. 2849-2864, Impact Factor 33.4 . DOI: 10.1039/c4cs00279b

Palavras-Chave #/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1600 #Chemistry(all)
Tipo

article