Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Abstract:
Tin dioxide nanowires have been grown by thermal oxidation of sputtered thin fi lms by means of a VLS
method. A tin sputtered layer catalyzed by gold nanoparticles acts as a material seed for the localized
growth of NWs directly on gas sensor devices, avoiding the manipulation and transport of the nanowires
to the electrodes. XRD and HRTEM analysis show that the nanowires crystallize in a rutile structure with
a [100] preferential growth direction, and are single-crystalline with diameters lower than 50 nm. The
response of nanowires to formaldehyde has been compared to thin fi lm based sensors. A sensitivity of
0.10 ppm is reported, twofold the sensitivity of the thin fi lm, and short response and recovery times
are measured (6 times shorter than thin fi lms). The sensing mechanism proposed for the SnO 2 NWs
under formaldehyde exposure is explained by means of conduction measurements and FT-IR analysis.
Oxygen species chemisorbed on the surface of each SnO 2 nanowire produce a band bending, which
generates a potential barrier (of 0.74 0.02 eV at 300 C) between the point contact of di ff erent nanowires. As evidenced by IR spectroscopy at 300 C, electrons in the conduction band and in mono-ionized oxygen vacancies (at 0.33 eV below the bottom of the conduction band) are responsible for gas detection.
Tipologia CRIS:
03A-Articolo su Rivista
Keywords:
Chemical Engineering (all); Chemistry (all)
Elenco autori:
Castro Hurtado, I.; Gonzalez Chávarri, J.; Morandi, Sara; Samà, J.; Romano Rodríguez, A.; Castaño, E.; Mandayo, G. G.
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