| Literature DB >> 36134214 |
E Petromichelaki1, E Gagaoudakis1,2, K Moschovis1, L Tsetseris3, T D Anthopoulos4, G Kiriakidis1,2, V Binas1,2.
Abstract
The fundamental development of the design of novel self-powered ozone sensing elements, operating at room temperature, based on p-type metal oxides paves the way to a new class of low cost, highly promising gas sensing devices. In this work, p-type Cu2O nanocubes were synthesized by a simple solution-based method and tested as a self-powered ozone sensing element, at room temperature (25 °C) for the first time. Highly crystalline Cu2O nanocubes with 30 nm size were characterized by X-ray Diffraction (XRD), Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM). Self-powered sensing elements of Cu2O nanocubes have been successfully fabricated by deposition of Cu2O nanocubes on interdigitated electrodes (IDEs) consisting of two connection tracks with 500 digits and a gap of 5 μm in order to investigate their response to ozone at room temperature. The experimental results showed that the use of nanocubes as sensing elements was suitable for detecting ultra-low concentrations of O3 down to 10 ppb at room temperature with very high sensitivity (28%) and a very low response/recovery time. The reversible sensing process of the relatively weak binding of O3 species by trapping sites on Cu2O facets with increased oxygen content was studied by using density functional theory (DFT) calculations. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 36134214 PMCID: PMC9416942 DOI: 10.1039/c9na00043g
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Adv ISSN: 2516-0230
Fig. 1Conductivity-based system with a gas test chamber.
Fig. 2(a) X-ray diffraction (XRD) pattern of Cu2O nanocubes and standard Cu2O card. (b and c) FESEM images and TEM images of Cu2O nanocubes.
Fig. 3(a) SEM images of the IDEs with a gap of 5 μm. (b) SEM of coated IDEs and zoomed view of the coated IDEs with nanocubes in the inset.
Fig. 4Current changes at room temperature of Cu2O nanocubes due to successive increases in O3 concentrations.
Fig. 5(a) Response and recovery time (s) of the sensor at different ozone concentrations. (b) Sensing sensitivity as a function of ozone concentration.
Fig. 6Energy variation during a typical oxidation reaction on a (001) Cu2O surface. An O2 molecule (its atoms are numbered 1 and 2) chemisorbs with a zero barrier to configuration (a), followed by its breakup to atomic O adatoms and structures (b) and (c). The transition state of the reaction is (b) and the barrier is low and equal to 0.43 eV.
Fig. 7Top views of O3 species over a (001) Cu2O surface: (a) a chemisorbed O3 protrusion (dashed line) with one Cu–O bond. (b) An O3-related bridge (dashed line) between surface Cu atoms. The O3 moiety forms three O–Cu bonds. (Cu: brown, O: red spheres).