4.6 Article

Gas-solid interfacial charge transfer in volatile organic compound detection by CuCrO2 nanoparticles

Journal

NANOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 31, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6528/abfa55

Keywords

metal oxide semiconductor; gas sensor; volatile organic compound; CuCrO2

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51805311, 61504079]
  2. Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality Program [19DZ2281000]

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Studied p-type metal oxide gas sensors based on delafossite CuCrO2 nanoparticles showed significant progress in gas sensitivity and selectivity, providing a new route for precise sensor design and development.
Nanostructured metal oxide semiconductors have received great attention used as the chemiresistive layer of gas sensor to detect the volatile organic compound recently. As indispensable complementary parts for dominative n-type semiconductors, the p-type metal oxides based gas sensors fail to be studied sufficiently, which hampers their practical applications. In this work, the p-type delafossite CuCrO2 nanoparticles were synthesized, characterized, and tested for gas sensing, followed by the first principles calculations to simulate the generation of chemiresistive signal. The hydrothermal synthesis time of CuCrO2 nanoparticles is optimized as 24 h with a higher proportion of oxygen vacancies but a smaller size, which is confirmed by the microscopy and spectrum characterization and allows for a prevailing gas sensitivity. Meanwhile, this CuCrO2 gas sensor is proven to perform a higher selectivity to n-propanol and a low detection limit of 1 ppm. The adsorption sites and charge variations of dehydrogenation at the gas-solid interface predicted by the theoretical analysis are claimed to be crucial to such selectivity. It is an innovative approach to understand the chemiresistive gas sensing by evaluating the preference of charge transfer between the sensor and target gaseous molecule, which provides a new route to precisely design and develop the advanced sensing devices for the diverse applications.

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