4.7 Article

Ultralow detection limit MEMS hydrogen sensor based on SnO2 with oxygen vacancies

Journal

SENSORS AND ACTUATORS B-CHEMICAL
Volume 354, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.snb.2021.130982

Keywords

Ultralow detection limit; Oxygen vacancies; MEMS H 2 sensor; Improved gas sensitivity

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2020YFB2008600]

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Controllable and efficient construction of oxygen vacancies on the surface of metal oxide semiconductors is essential for gas sensor applications. SnO2 synthesized with oxygen vacancies by H2 reduction method shows improved response and low-concentration detection capability compared to pristine SnO2, demonstrating the effectiveness of oxygen vacancy defects in enhancing gas-sensing performance.
Controllable and efficient construction of oxygen vacancies on the surface of metal oxide semiconductors (MOSs) is essential for their application in the gas sensor. Herein, a general H2 reduction method is developed to synthesize SnO2 with oxygen vacancies defect (SnO2-D) by annealing the SnO2 in a H2 atmosphere at different temperature (300 degrees C, 400 degrees C and 500 degrees C), and then named SnO2-D3, SnO2-D4 and SnO2-D5, respectively. It was found that although the determined specific surface areas for pristine SnO2, SnO2-D3, SnO2-D4 and SnO2-D5 are 103.749 m2g 1, 63.316 m2g 1, 47.652 m2g 1 and 15.541 m2g1, respectively, the gas sensitivity test results indicate that the SnO2-D4 Micro-Electro-Mechanical System (MEMS) sensor shows improved response and excellent low-concentration detection capability (down to 0.1 ppm) to H2 compared with that fabricated with pristine SnO2, SnO2-D3 and SnO2-D5. The abnormal relationship between specific surface area and gas sensing performance is attributed to the more oxygen vacancies of SnO2-D4 surface. In addition, ZnO (ZnO-D) and In2O3 (In2O3-D) with oxygen vacancy defects based on the H2 reduction method show better gas sensitivity than ZnO and In2O3 sensors, which further proves that oxygen vacancy defects can effectively improve the gas-sensing performance of MOSs.

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