| Literature DB >> 30709040 |
Hongwu Wang1, Ding Wang2,3, Liang Tian4, Huijun Li5, Ping Wang6,7, Nanquan Ou8, Xianying Wang9,10, Junhe Yang11,12.
Abstract
In order to obtain acetone sensor with excellent sensitivity, selectivity, and rapid response/recovery speed, graphene-like ZnO/graphene oxide (GO) nanosheets were synthesized using the wet-chemical method with an additional calcining treatment. The GO was utilized as both the template to form the two-dimensional (2-D) nanosheets and the sensitizer to enhance the sensing properties. Sensing performances of ZnO/GO nanocomposites were studied with acetone as a target gas. The response value could reach 94 to 100 ppm acetone vapor and the recovery time could reach 4 s. The excellent sensing properties were ascribed to the synergistic effects between ZnO nanosheets and GO, which included a unique 2-D structure, large specific surface area, suitable particle size, and abundant in-plane mesopores, which contributed to the advance of novel acetone vapor sensors and could provide some references to the synthesis of 2-D graphene-like metals oxide nanosheets.Entities:
Keywords: ZnO/GO nanosheets; acetone gas sensors; nanocomposites; two-dimensional structure
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30709040 PMCID: PMC6384705 DOI: 10.3390/molecules24030522
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1(a) XRD patterns of ZnO/GO NSs-T; (b) Raman spectra of ZnO/GO NSs-T; (c) TGA curves of ZnO/GO NSs-T.
Figure 2(a) The SEM image of ZnO/GO NSs-525; (b) TEM image of ZnO/GO NSs-525 and the selected area electron diffraction (SAED) pattern was inset; (c) large magnification TEM image of ZnO/GO NSs-525, the inset is an enlarged disordered lattice fringe view of GO in the local area of a HRTEM image; (d) HRTEM image of ZnO/GO NSs-525.
Figure 3(a) XPS survey spectrum of the ZnO/GO NSs-525; high-resolution core-level XPS spectra: (b) Zn 2p, (c) C 1s and (d) O 1s.
Figure 4(a) Isothermal adsorption/desorption curve, (b) pore diameter distribution of ZnO/GO NSs-525.
Figure 5(a) Sensor response values of ZnO/GO NSs-T at 250–450 °C towards 100 ppm acetone; (b) Responses of ZnO/GO NSs-T sensor to 100 ppm different gases at 400 °C; (c) Response/recovery graphs of ZnO/GO NSs-T sensor towards 100 ppm acetone at 400 °C; (d) Response-recovery curves of the sensors to different acetone vapor concentrations (0.5–10 ppm); (e) Response-recovery curves of the sensors to different acetone vapor concentrations (50–500 ppm); (f) the relationship of response value and acetone concentration of ZnO/GO NSs-T sensors.
Figure 6(a) Reproducibility of the ZnO/GO NSs-525 to 100 ppm of acetone at 400 °C; (b) response values to 100 ppm acetone at different relative humidity.
The sensing properties comparison of graphene-like porous ZnO/graphene oxide nanosheets with the reported acetone vapor sensors.
| Materials | Concentration (ppm) | Response (Ra/Rg) | Recovery Time (s) | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ZnO nanotube | 100 | 3.5 | 10 | [ |
| Mesoporous ZnO | 100 | 33 | 3 | [ |
| 3D ZnO microsphere | 100 | 22 | 17 | [ |
| ZnO/ZnCo2O4 | 100 | 7.5 | 36 | [ |
| Pt-ZnO-In2O3 nanofibers | 100 | 57.1 | 44 | [ |
| Ce-ZnO nanoparticles | 100 | 20 | 9 | [ |
| NiO/ZnO microflowers | 100 | 23.5 | 41 | [ |
| ZnO/GO nanocomposites | 100 | 35.8 | 7 | [ |
| ZnO/GO NSs | 100 | 94 | 4 | This work |
Scheme 1Schematic of (a) the depletion theory and (b) the sensing mechanism.
Scheme 2Schematic illustration for fabrication of ZnO/GO NSs-T using GO templated one step solution process. Step 1: preparation of GO by ultrasonic stripping of graphite oxide and the adsorption of HMTA on GO surface; Step 2: the adsorption of Zn(CH3COO)2 on GO surface; Step 3: Remove excess Zn(CH3COO)2 by washing; Step 4: the ZnO/GO NSs-T were prepared by calcination of precursor.