Self-Cleaning Glass with TiO2 Coatings
ISEF Category: Materials Science
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Subcategory: Ceramic and Glasses · Difficulty: Intermediate · Setup: School Lab · Time: 1 to 2 Months
The Hook
Some glass can clean itself when light hits it. That sounds like magic, but it comes from a surface reaction you can measure. If you can track how fast a blue dye fades, you can test whether a TiO2 coating really works. That gives you a real materials science project with a visible result.
What Is It?
Photocatalytic self-cleaning glass uses a coating that speeds up chemical breakdown when light shines on it. TiO2, or titanium dioxide, acts like a light-activated helper. Sunlight gives the coating enough energy to trigger reactions that can damage dye molecules and other organic grime.
Think of the coating like a tiny outdoor work crew on the glass surface. The light turns the crew on, and the dye slowly disappears. Methylene blue works well as a test dye because it has a strong color, so you can track how much remains by measuring how dark the solution looks over time.
Your project asks a simple question with useful data behind it. Does a TiO2-coated slide fade methylene blue faster than an uncoated slide, and how does the rate change with coating thickness, light exposure, or surface prep?
Why This Is a Good Topic
This project is testable because you can measure color change over time and compare treated and untreated glass. It connects to a real problem, keeping windows, solar panels, and building surfaces cleaner with less scrubbing and fewer chemicals. You can learn coating control, light-driven chemistry, and basic kinetics without needing a university lab.
Research Questions
- How does TiO2 coating thickness affect the rate of methylene blue degradation under sunlight?
- What is the effect of surface cleaning before coating on photocatalytic performance?
- Does adding a binder or changing the dip-coating method change how evenly the TiO2 film covers the glass?
- To what extent does direct sunlight versus shaded daylight change the degradation rate?
- Which glass surface treatment gives the largest drop in absorbance over time?
- How does repeated reuse of the same coated slide affect its photocatalytic activity?
Basic Materials
- Microscope slides or plain glass coupons with similar size and thickness.
- Food-grade TiO2 powder.
- Distilled water.
- Small beakers or clear cups.
- Digital scale with at least 0.01 g precision.
- Dropper pipettes or disposable transfer pipettes.
- Clean stirring rods or plastic stirrers.
- Timer or stopwatch.
- UV-blocking safety glasses.
- Nitrile gloves.
- Smartphone camera with manual exposure control.
- White background or light box for consistent photos.
- Metric ruler or caliper.
- Methylene blue solution prepared by a school lab or teacher.
Advanced Materials
- Spin coater or controlled dip-coating setup.
- Analytical balance.
- UV-Vis spectrophotometer.
- Quartz or borosilicate cuvettes.
- Surface profilometer or ellipsometer.
- SEM access for coating morphology.
- XRD access for TiO2 phase confirmation.
- Contact angle goniometer.
- LED UVA lamp with known irradiance.
- Solar simulator or calibrated outdoor light meter.
- ImageJ software for image-based intensity analysis.
- Lab oven or hot plate for drying, if your protocol allows it.
Software & Tools
- ImageJ: Measures color intensity changes in photos and helps you turn images into data.
- Python: Organizes time series data, fits kinetic models, and plots degradation curves.
- Google Sheets: Tracks sample labels, light conditions, and absorbance or color data.
- GeoGebra: Fits simple trend lines and exponential decay models if you want a lighter analysis workflow.
- NIH ImageJ macro recorder: Automates repeated image measurements across many samples.
Experiment Steps
- Define the one coating variable you will change first, such as TiO2 loading, surface prep, or dip-coating count.
- Plan a control group with uncoated glass so you can separate true photocatalysis from normal dye fading.
- Decide how you will measure color loss, either with a spectrophotometer or with standardized photos and image analysis.
- Build a calibration plan so your signal can be converted into concentration or relative absorbance values.
- Map out how you will keep light exposure, sample size, and starting dye color as constant as possible.
- Choose the kinetic model you will test, such as linear, first-order, or comparative rate analysis.
Common Pitfalls
- Using inconsistent sunlight between trials, which makes one run look faster even when the coating did not change.
- Letting the TiO2 settle before each dip, which gives uneven films and weakens comparisons.
- Comparing photos taken under different room lighting, which changes the apparent color even when the dye level stays the same.
- Skipping an uncoated glass control, which makes it hard to prove the coating caused the effect.
- Mixing up surface roughness, coating thickness, and light angle, which hides the real reason one sample performs better.
What Makes This Competitive
A stronger project does more than show that the blue color gets lighter. You can compare several coating designs, quantify the surface quality, and test whether the rate follows a real kinetic model. Strong entries also control light dose carefully, use repeated trials, and back up the photos with calibrated data. That turns a simple demo into a real materials study.
Project Variations
- Test how TiO2-coated glass performs under UVA LED light instead of sunlight.
- Compare methylene blue with another dye, such as food coloring or rhodamine B, to see whether molecular structure changes the decay rate.
- Change the glass pretreatment, such as washing, sanding, or plasma cleaning, and measure how surface condition affects coating performance.
Learn More
- PubChem: Look up methylene blue properties, structure, and safety details by searching PubChem for the compound name.
- NOAA Solar Calculator: Find sunlight timing and angle for your location when planning outdoor exposure tests.
- NASA Earth Observatory: Read about how sunlight and surface reflectivity affect materials in outdoor settings, then search the site for related articles.
- Photocatalysis: Fundamentals and Perspectives in peer-reviewed journals: Search for review articles on photocatalysis through PubMed or Google Scholar through your school library.
- MIT OpenCourseWare: Search for materials science and surface chemistry lectures that explain thin films, reaction rates, and optical measurement.
Materials Science Category Guide
How to Do Real Materials Science Research at Home: A High School Student’s Guide to Free Tools, Affordable Kits, and Public Databases →For next steps tailored to your interests, skill level, and timeline, work one-on-one with a MehtA+ mentor. Learn more about MehtA+ Science & Engineering Research Mentorship →
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