| Literature DB >> 31058141 |
Haiyun Xu1, Jie Gao1, Minhan Li1, Yuye Zhao1, Ming Zhang2, Tao Zhao1, Lianjun Wang1, Wan Jiang1,3,4, Guanjia Zhu1, Xiaoyong Qian1, Yuchi Fan3, Jianping Yang1,3, Wei Luo1,3.
Abstract
Semiconducting metal oxides with abundant active sites are regarded as promising candidates for environmental monitoring and breath analysis because of their excellent gas sensing performance and stability. Herein, mesoporous WO3 nanofibers with a crystalline framework and uniform pore size is successfully synthesized in an aqueous phase using an electrospinning method, with ammonium metatungstate as the tungsten sources, and SiO2 nanoparticles and polyvinylpyrrolidone as the sacrificial templates. The obtained mesoporous WO3 nanofibers exhibit a controllable pore size of 26.3-42.2 nm, specific surface area of 24.1-34.4 m2g-1, and a pore volume of 0.15-0.24 cm3g-1. This unique hierarchical structure, with uniform mesopores and interconnected channels, could facilitate the diffusion and transportation of gas molecules in the framework. Gas sensors, based on mesoporous WO3 nanofibers, exhibit an excellent performance in acetone sensing with a low limit of detection (<1 ppm), short response-recovery time (24 s/27 s), a linear relationship in a broad range, and good selectivity.Entities:
Keywords: WO3; acetone; electrospun; mesoporous materials; nanofibers; sensor
Year: 2019 PMID: 31058141 PMCID: PMC6482242 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2019.00266
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Figure 1(A) Sketch of the structure of the side-heated mesoporous WO3 NFs based gas sensor. (B) Electric circuit of gas sensing measurements.
Scheme 1The fabrication process of the mesoporous WO3 NFs by electrospinning approach.
Figure 2FESEM images of (A) as-spun tungsten species/PVP/SiO2 (25 nm) NFs, (B) WO3/carbon/SiO2 (25 nm) NFs, (C) mesoporous WO3-25 NFs. TEM images of (D) WO3/carbon/SiO2 (25 nm) NFs, (E) mesoporous WO3-25 NFs. HRTEM image of (E) mesoporous WO3-25 NFs. (F) Scanning TEM image and the corresponding EDS mapping images (G) of elemental W, Si, C, and O for WO3/carbon/SiO2 (25 nm) NFs.
Figure 3(A) XRD patterns of (1) mesoporous WO3-25 NFs, (2) mesoporous WO3-40 NFs, (3) non-mesoporous WO3 NFs, (4) WO3/carbon/SiO2 (25 nm) NFs, (5) WO3/carbon/SiO2 (40 nm) NFs, (6) WO3/carbon NFs. (B) Nitrogen-sorption isotherms and (C) pore size distribution curves of mesoporous WO3-25 NFs and mesoporous WO3-40 NFs.
Figure 4(A) sensing mechanism of WO3 NFs toward acetone. (B) responses of the mesoporous and non-mesoporous WO3 NFs sensor to 50 ppm acetone at different operating temperatures (150–400°C). (C) repeating response and recovery curve of the mesoporous and non-mesoporous WO3 NFs to 50 ppm acetone.
Figure 5(A) response–recovery curve and (B) relationships between acetone concentration and response of the mesoporous WO3-25 NFs sensor to acetone vapors of different concentrations. (C) dynamic response–recovery curve of mesoporous WO3-25 NFs sensor to 50 ppm acetone. (D) responses of the mesoporous WO3-25 NFs sensor to various gases at 50 ppm.
Comparison of acetone sensing properties of WO3 or WO3 based sensors with various nanostructures.
| Porous WO3 | 300°C | 50 | 12.1 | 4/11.7 s | Dong et al., |
| WO3 plate | 307°C | 100 | ~15 | 10/26 s | Liu et al., |
| WO3 nanoflowers | 300°C | 100 | ~7 | Not mentioned | Wang et al., |
| Co3O4-WO3 nanocomposite | 280°C | 100 | 5.3 | Not mentioned | Zhao et al., |
| Ag-WO3 nanosheets | 340°C | 50 | ~8 | 28/38 s | Yin et al., |
| MoO3-WO3 nanostructures | 320°C | 100 | 18.2 | 8/7 s | Sun et al., |
| WO3@CuO nanostructures | Not mentioned | 50 | 3.4 | 72.2/29.4 s | Yang F. et al., |
| cactus-like WO3-SnO2 | 360°C | 100 | 12.1 | Not mentioned | Zhu et al., |
| Gd doped WO3-RGO nanostructures | 350°C | 50 | 27.0 | Not mentioned | Kaur et al., |
| La2O3-WO3 nanofibers | 350°C | 100 | 12.7 | 6/210 s | Feng et al., |
| Mesoporous WO3 NFs | 350°C | 50 | 22.1 | 24/27 s | This wok |