We describe the introduction of titanium centers to cubic MCM-48 and SBA-15 mesoporous silica by hydrothermal and postsynthetic grafting techniques. MCM-48 was hydrothermally prepared with a gemini surfactant that favors the cubic phase and leads to a high degree of long-range pore ordering. This phase was chosen due to its high surface area (1100-1300 m(2)/g) and its three-dimensional, bicontinuous pore array, SBA-15, synthesized with a block copolymer template under acidic conditions, has a surface area from 600 to 900 m(2)/g and an average pore diameter of 69 Angstrom, compared to 24-27 Angstrom for MCM-48, Alkoxide precursors of titanium were used to prepare samples of Ti-MCM-48 and Ti-SBA-15, We have detailed the bulk and molecular structure of both the silica framework and the local bonding environment of the titanium ions within each matrix. X-ray powder diffraction and nitrogen adsorption shows the pore structure is maintained despite some shrinkage of the pore diameter at high Ti loadings by grafting methods, UV-visible and Raman spectroscopy indicate that grafting produces the least amount of Ti-O-Ti bonds and instead favors isolated tetrahedral and octahedral titanium centers. High-resolution photoacoustic FTIR spectra demonstrated the presence of intermediate range order within the silicate walls of MCM-48, established the consumption of surface silanols to form Si-O-Ti bonds by grafting, and resolved the characteristic IR absorbance at 960 cm(-1), occurring in titanium silicates, into two components. All three spectroscopic techniques, including in situ Raman, reveal the reactive intermediates formed when the materials are contacted with hydrogen peroxide.