Assessment of the Suitability of the One-Step Hydrothermal Method for Preparation of Non-Covalently/Covalently-Bonded TiO₂/Graphene-Based Hybrids

Nanomaterials (Basel). 2018 Aug 23;8(9):647. doi: 10.3390/nano8090647.

Abstract

A hybrid nanocomposites containing nanocrystalline TiO₂ and graphene-related materials (graphene oxide or reduced graphene oxide) were successfully prepared by mechanical mixing and the hydrothermal method in the high-pressure atmosphere. The presented X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) study and quantitative elemental analysis confirm similar content of carbon in graphene oxide GO (52 wt% and 46 wt%, respectively) and reduced graphene oxide rGO (92 wt% and 98 wt%, respectively). No chemical interactions between TiO₂ and GO/rGO was found. TiO₂ nanoparticles were loaded on GO or rGO flakes. However, Fourier transform infrared-diffuse reflection spectroscopy (FTIR/DRS) allowed finding peaks characteristic of GO and rGO. XPS study shows that since the concentration of TiO₂ in the samples was no less than 95 wt%, it was assumed that the interactions between TiO₂ and graphene should not influence the lower layers of titanium atoms in the TiO₂ and they occurred as Ti4+ ions. Hydrothermal treatment at 200 °C did not cause the reduction of GO to rGO in TiO₂-GO nanocomposites. In general, the one-step hydrothermal method must be considered to be inefficient for preparation of chemically-bonded composites synthesized from commercially available TiO₂ and unfunctionalized graphene sheets obtained from graphite powder.

Keywords: TiO2; TiO2-graphene bonding; graphene; hybrid composites; hydrothermal method.