Cu-Doped TiO2: Visible Light Assisted Photocatalytic Antimicrobial Activity /
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Date
2018-10-26Author
Mathew, Snehamol
Ganguly, Priyanka
Rhatigan, Stephen
Kumaravel, Vignesh
Byrne, Ciara
Hinder, Steven J.
Bartlett, John
Nolan, Michael
Pillai, Suresh C.
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Surface contamination by microbes is a major public health concern. A damp environment is
one of potential sources for microbe proliferation. Smart photocatalytic coatings on building surfaces
using semiconductors like titania (TiO2) can effectively curb this growing threat. Metal-doped
titania in anatase phase has been proven as a promising candidate for energy and environmental
applications. In this present work, the antimicrobial efficacy of copper (Cu)-doped TiO2 (Cu-TiO2)
was evaluated against Escherichia coli (Gram-negative) and Staphylococcus aureus (Gram-positive)
under visible light irradiation. Doping of a minute fraction of Cu (0.5 mol %) in TiO2 was carried out
via sol-gel technique. Cu-TiO2 further calcined at various temperatures (in the range of 500–700 ◦C) to
evaluate the thermal stability of TiO2 anatase phase. The physico-chemical properties of the samples
were characterized through X-ray diffraction (XRD), Raman spectroscopy, X-ray photo-electron
spectroscopy (XPS) and UV–visible spectroscopy techniques. XRD results revealed that the anatase
phase of TiO2 was maintained well, up to 650 ◦C, by the Cu dopant. UV–vis results suggested
that the visible light absorption property of Cu-TiO2 was enhanced and the band gap is reduced to
2.8 eV. Density functional theory (DFT) studies emphasize the introduction of Cu+ and Cu2+ ions
by replacing Ti4+ ions in the TiO2 lattice, creating oxygen vacancies. These further promoted the
photocatalytic efficiency. A significantly high bacterial inactivation (99.9999%) was attained in 30 min
of visible light irradiation by Cu-TiO2.
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