Titanium dioxide (TiO2)
Photocatalysis : from nanostructured materials to photocatalytic reactors
Quizzed article REF: NM3600 V1
Titanium dioxide (TiO2)
Photocatalysis : from nanostructured materials to photocatalytic reactors

Authors : Delphine SCHAMING, Christophe COLBEAU-JUSTIN, Hynd REMITA

Publication date: August 10, 2017, Review date: January 13, 2021 | Lire en français

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2. Titanium dioxide (TiO2)

Titanium dioxide (TiO 2 ) is the most commonly used photocatalyst.

2.1 Origin

Titanium (chemical symbol: Ti) is the fourth most abundant metal on Earth (after aluminum, iron and magnesium) and the ninth most abundant chemical element. Titanium accounts for 0.63% of the earth's crust by mass. It was discovered in England in 1791 by mineralogist William Gregor, who discovered the presence of a new chemical element in an ore called ilmenite. The element was rediscovered several years later by a German chemist, Heinrich Klaporth, in another ore, rutile. He gave this new chemical element the name titanium, in reference to the Titans (giant primordial deities who preceded the Olympian gods in Greek mythology), who were...

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