Molecules (Oct 2021)

Highly Sensitive, Selective, Flexible and Scalable Room-Temperature NO<sub>2</sub> Gas Sensor Based on Hollow SnO<sub>2</sub>/ZnO Nanofibers

  • Jiahui Guo,
  • Weiwei Li,
  • Xuanliang Zhao,
  • Haowen Hu,
  • Min Wang,
  • Yi Luo,
  • Dan Xie,
  • Yingjiu Zhang,
  • Hongwei Zhu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26216475
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 21
p. 6475

Abstract

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Semiconducting metal oxides can detect low concentrations of NO2 and other toxic gases, which have been widely investigated in the field of gas sensors. However, most studies on the gas sensing properties of these materials are carried out at high temperatures. In this work, Hollow SnO2 nanofibers were successfully synthesized by electrospinning and calcination, followed by surface modification using ZnO to improve the sensitivity of the SnO2 nanofibers sensor to NO2 gas. The gas sensing behavior of SnO2/ZnO sensors was then investigated at room temperature (~20 °C). The results showed that SnO2/ZnO nanocomposites exhibited high sensitivity and selectivity to 0.5 ppm of NO2 gas with a response value of 336%, which was much higher than that of pure SnO2 (13%). In addition to the increase in the specific surface area of SnO2/ZnO-3 compared with pure SnO2, it also had a positive impact on the detection sensitivity. This increase was attributed to the heterojunction effect and the selective NO2 physisorption sensing mechanism of SnO2/ZnO nanocomposites. In addition, patterned electrodes of silver paste were printed on different flexible substrates, such as paper, polyethylene terephthalate and polydimethylsiloxane using a facile screen-printing process. Silver electrodes were integrated with SnO2/ZnO into a flexible wearable sensor array, which could detect 0.1 ppm NO2 gas after 10,000 bending cycles. The findings of this study therefore open a general approach for the fabrication of flexible devices for gas detection applications.

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