4.4 Article

Pt- and Pd-decorated MWCNTs for vapour and gas detection at room temperature

Journal

BEILSTEIN JOURNAL OF NANOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 6, Issue -, Pages 919-927

Publisher

BEILSTEIN-INSTITUT
DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.6.95

Keywords

gas and vapour sensing; metal decoration; mutiwalled carbon nanotubes; plasma treatment; sputtering

Funding

  1. Science for Peace and Security Program of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization [SFP 984511]
  2. URV
  3. Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies under the ICREA Academia Award

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Here we report on the gas sensing properties of multiwalled carbon nanotubes decorated with sputtered Pt or Pd nanoparticles. Sputtering allows for an oxygen plasma treatment that removes amorphous carbon from the surface of the carbon nanotubes and creates oxygenated surface defects in which metal nanoparticles nucleate within a few minutes. The decoration with the 2 nm Pt or the 3 nm Pd nanoparticles is very homogeneous. This procedure is performed at the device level (i.e., for carbon nanotubes deposited onto sensor substrates) for many devices in one batch, which illustrates the scalability for the mass production of affordable nanosensors. The response to selected aromatic and non-aromatic volatile organic compounds, as well as pollutant gases has been studied. Pt- and Pd-decorated multiwalled carbon nanotubes show a fully reversible response to the non-aromatic volatile organic compounds tested when operated at room temperature. In contrast, these nanomaterials were not responsive to the aromatic compounds studied (measured at concentrations up to 50 ppm). Therefore, these sensors could be useful in a small, battery-operated alarm detector, for example, which is able to discriminate aromatic from non-aromatic volatile organic compounds in ambient.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available