Literature DB >> 33913692

Growth-Temperature Dependent Unpassivated Oxygen Bonds Determine the Gas Sensing Abilities of Chemical Vapor Deposition-Grown CuO Thin Films.

Aman Nanda1, Vivek Singh1, Ravindra Kumar Jha1, Jyoti Sinha1, Sushobhan Avasthi1, Navakanta Bhat1.   

Abstract

CuO is a multifunctional metal oxide excellent for chemiresistive gas sensors. In this work, we report CuO-based NO2 sensors fabricated via chemical vapor deposition (CVD). CVD allows great control on composition, stoichiometry, impurity, roughness, and grain size of films. This endows sensors with high selectivity, responsivity, sensitivity, and repeatability, low hysteresis, and quick recovery. All these are achieved without the need of expensive and unscalable nanostructures, or heterojunctions, with a technologically mature CVD. Films deposited at very low temperatures (≤350 °C) are sensitive but slow due to traps and small grains. Films deposited at high temperatures (≥550 °C) are not hysteretic but suffer from low sensitivity and slow response due to lack of surface states. Films deposited at optimum temperatures (350-450 °C) combine the best aspects of both regimes to yield NO2 sensors with a response of 300 % at 5 ppm, sensitivity limit of 300 ppb, hysteresis of <20%, repeatable performance, and recovery time of ∼1 min. The work demonstrates that CVD might be a more effective way to deposit oxide films for gas sensors.

Entities:  

Keywords:  dangling oxygen; grain size; growth temperature; metal oxide sensors; surface roughness

Year:  2021        PMID: 33913692     DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c01085

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ACS Appl Mater Interfaces        ISSN: 1944-8244            Impact factor:   9.229


  1 in total

Review 1.  P-Type Metal Oxide Semiconductor Thin Films: Synthesis and Chemical Sensor Applications.

Authors:  Abderrahim Moumen; Gayan C W Kumarage; Elisabetta Comini
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2022-02-10       Impact factor: 3.576

  1 in total

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