| Literature DB >> 29559672 |
Li Guo1, Ya-Wei Hao2, Pei-Long Li1, Jiang-Feng Song1, Rui-Zhu Yang1, Xiu-Yan Fu3, Sheng-Yi Xie4, Jing Zhao5, Yong-Lai Zhang6.
Abstract
We report on the fabrication of a NO2 gas sensor from room-temperature reduction of graphene oxide(GO) via two-beam-laser interference (TBLI). The method of TBLI gives the distribution of periodic dissociation energies for oxygen functional groups, which are capable to reduce the graphene oxide to hierarchical graphene nanostructures, which holds great promise for gaseous molecular adsorption. The fabricated reduced graphene oxide(RGO) sensor enhanced sensing response in NO2 and accelerated response/recovery rates. It is seen that, for 20 ppm NO2, the response (Ra/Rg) of the sensor based on RGO hierarchical nanostructures is 1.27, which is higher than that of GO (1.06) and thermal reduced RGO (1.04). The response time and recovery time of the sensor based on laser reduced RGO are 10 s and 7 s, which are much shorter than those of GO (34 s and 45 s), indicating that the sensing performances for NO2 sensor at room temperature have been enhanced by introduction of nanostructures. This mask-free and large-area approach to the production of hierarchical graphene micro-nanostructures, could lead to the implementation of future graphene-based sensors.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29559672 PMCID: PMC5861053 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-23091-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Fabrication scheme of reduction of GO film by two beam laser interference. (b) Optical microscope image of RGO film. (c) SEM image of the grating structure of the graphene surface fabricated at 0.15 W.
Figure 2(a) C1s XPS and (b) Raman spectra of pristine GO and RGO.
Figure 3(a) Response and recovery curves of the sensor based on RGO and GO to various NO2 concentrations at room temperature. (b) The reproducibility of temporal response of RGO exposed to 4 ppm NO2 at room temperature. (c) and (d) The response recovery curves to 20 ppm NO2 of the sensor based on RGO and GO at room temperature, respectively.
Figure 4The long-time stability of RGO sensor for NO2 sensing.
Figure 5Detection selectivity of RGO sensor upon exposure to various vapors (~4 ppm) operating at room temprature.
Comparison of sensing performances of our NO2 sensor with other published gas sensors based on micro-nano structured graphene-based materials.
| properties of sensing material | Preparation method | Tested gas (ppm) | Gas response | Operating temperature(°C) | Response time(τr/s) | Recovery time (τd/s) | Year of publication | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aerographite | Chemical vapour deposition | CO2 (500) | 3.83% | RT | 3.98 | 6.92 | 2016 |
[ |
| 3D graphene foam network | Chemical vapour deposition | NH3 (1000) | 30% | RT | ~500 | ~800 | 2011 |
[ |
| 3D graphene/SnO2 | Freeze drying | NO2 (50) | 6% | RT | 190 | 224 | 2014 |
[ |
| 3D SnO2/RGO | Freeze drying | NO2 (100) | 1.079 | 55 | >310a | 373 | 2015 |
[ |
| Graphene nanomesh | Nanosphere lithography | NO2 (10) | 11%a | RT | >300a | >300a | 2012 |
[ |
| RGO nanofibers | Electrostatic self-assembly | NO2 (4.5) | 20% | RT | >300a | >300a | 2014 |
[ |
| Porous Graphene Oxide Network | Steam Etched | NO2 (250) | 8% | RT | ~200a | ~400a | 2011 |
[ |
| This work | Two-beam-laser Interference | NO2 (4) | 1.2 | RT | <10 | <10 |
aEstimated from graphical plot.
Figure 6First-principle study of the interaction between NO2 molecule and graphene sheets, as well as epoxy or hydroxyl groups functionalized graphene.