Sonication-Assisted Synthesis of Gallium Oxide Suspensions Featuring Trap State Absorption: Test of Photochemistry
Version 2 2024-06-05, 11:00Version 2 2024-06-05, 11:00
Version 1 2017-09-30, 15:49Version 1 2017-09-30, 15:49
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-05, 11:00authored byN Syed, A Zavabeti, M Mohiuddin, B Zhang, Y Wang, RS Datta, P Atkin, BJ Carey, C Tan, J van Embden, ASR Chesman, JZ Ou, T Daeneke, K Kalantar-zadeh
Gallium is a near room temperature liquid metal with extraordinary properties that partly originate from the self-limiting oxide layer formed on its surface. Taking advantage of the surface gallium oxide (Ga₂O₃), this work introduces a novel technique to synthesize gallium oxide nanoflakes at high yield by harvesting the self-limiting native surface oxide of gallium. The synthesis process follows a facile two-step method comprising liquid gallium metal sonication in DI water and subsequent annealing. In order to explore the functionalities of the product, the obtained hexagonal α-Ga₂O₃ nanoflakes are used as a photocatalytic material to decompose organic model dyes. Excellent photocatalytic activity is observed under solar light irradiation. To elucidate the origin of these enhanced catalytic properties, the electronic band structure of the synthesized α-Ga₂O₃ is carefully assessed. Consequently, this excellent photocatalytic performance is associated with an energy bandgap reduction, due to the presence of trap states, which are located at ≈1.65 eV under the conduction band minimum. This work presents a novel route for synthesizing oxide nanostructures that can be extended to other low melting temperature metals and their alloys, with great prospects for scaling up and high yield synthesis.
History
Journal
Advanced Functional Materials
Volume
27
Article number
ARTN 1702295
Pagination
1702295 - 1702304
Location
Weinheim, Germany
ISSN
1616-301X
eISSN
1616-3028
Language
English
Publication classification
C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal