| Literature DB >> 30544829 |
Dongping Xue1,2, Yan Wang3, Jianliang Cao4, Zhanying Zhang5,6.
Abstract
Developing the triethylamine sensor with excellent sensitivity and selectivity is important for detectinpan>g the triethylamine concentration change in the environment. In this work, flower-like CeO₂-SnO₂ composites with different contents of CeO₂ were successfully synthesized by the one-step hydrothermal reaction. Some characterization methods were used to research the morphology and structure of the samples. Gas-sensing performance of the CeO₂-SnO₂ gas sensor was also studied and the results show that the flower-like CeO₂-SnO₂ composite showed an enhanced gas-sensing property to triethylamine compared to that of pure SnO₂. The response value of the 5 wt.% CeO₂ content composite based sensor to 200 ppm triethylamine under the optimum working temperature (310 °C) is approximately 3.8 times higher than pure SnO₂. In addition, CeO₂-SnO₂ composite is also significantly more selective for triethylamine than pure SnO₂ and has better linearity over a wide range of triethylamine concentrations. The improved gas-sensing mechanism of the composites toward triethylamine was also carefully discussed.Entities:
Keywords: CeO2-SnO2; gas sensor; hydrothermal; nanostructure; triethylamine
Year: 2018 PMID: 30544829 PMCID: PMC6315987 DOI: 10.3390/nano8121025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1XRD patterns of the samples.
Figure 2Field-emission scanning electron microscopy (FESEM) images of pure SnO2 (a,b) and SC-5 nanocomposite (c,d) and the EDS images (e-h) of the SC-5 sample.
Figure 3UV–vis absorption spectra of the synthesized SC-0 and SC-5 samples. The upper right corner inset is the relationship lines of (αhv)2 and hv.
Figure 4The response of the synthesized samples to 200 ppm TEA at different operating temperatures.
TEA sensing performance comparison between this study and other reported results.
| Materials | TEA Concentration (ppm) | Temperature(°C) | Response(Ra/Rg) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SnO2 | 200 | 350 | 5.9 | [ |
| Au@ZnO/SnO2 | 200 | 300 | 160 | [ |
| Au@SnO2/α-Fe2O3 | 200 | 300 | 63 | [ |
| ZnFe2O4/α-Fe2O3 | 200 | 305 | 65 | [ |
| CoMoO4 | 200 | 600 | 110 | [ |
| CeO2 | 100 | Room temperature | 4.67 | [ |
| Ce-doped In2O3 | 200 | 130 | 61.9 | [ |
| SC-5 | 200 | 310 | 252.2 | this work |
Figure 5(a) Response of the sensors to different TEA concentrations at 310 °C (the inset shows the response curve in the range of 20–200 ppm), (b) dynamic response-recover curves of the sensors to different TEA concentrations at 310 °C, (c) responses of the SC-0 and SC-5 sensors to five gases of 200 ppm, (d) long-term stability measurements of the SC-5 sensor to 200 ppm TEA at 310 °C.
Figure 6TEA sensing mechanisms diagram of (a) pure SnO2 and (b) CeO2/SnO2 nanostructure.
Figure 7Structure diagram of gas sensor.