4.8 Article

Quick NO Gas Sensing by Ti-Doped Flower-Rod-like ZnO Structures Synthesized by the SILAR Method

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 14, Issue 36, Pages 41555-41570

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.2c10055

Keywords

SILAR; Ti-doped ZnO; structural properties; optical properties; electrical properties; gas sensor

Funding

  1. Science Committee of the Ministry of Education and Science of the Republic of Kazakhstan [AP13067814]
  2. Nazarbayev University under the Collaborative Research Program [021220CRP0122]

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In this study, Ti-doped ZnO films with flower-rod-like nanostructures were synthesized and their enhanced gas-sensing properties were investigated. The 1% Ti-doped ZnO film showed the best sensing performance, with high selectivity, stability, and short response and recovery times.
In this study, Ti-doped ZnO films with flower-rod-like nanostructures were synthesized by the successive ionic layer adsorption and reaction (SILAR) method for enhanced NO gas-sensing applications. The stoichiometric ratio of Ti in the host ZnO lattice was confirmed by atomic absorption and energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopies. All of the synthesized films exhibited a pure wurtzite hexagonal structure that seemed to deteriorate at high Ti doping contents as was manifested by the measured X-ray diffraction patterns. Scanning electron microscopy images of ZnO revealed the coexistence of porous flower-and rod-like structures, which became finer, denser, and more compact with Ti doping. By UV-vis measurements, the transmittance of the synthesized pure ZnO thin film in the visible region (similar to 75%) increased by about 10% with Ti doping, and the energy band gap seemed to decrease up to some limit of Ti content. Among the fabricated sensors (based on pure ZnO, 1% Ti-doped, 3% Ti-doped, and 5% Ti-doped ZnO films), the best sensing performance was observed for the 1% Ti-doped ZnO film. At first, this was associated with its high density of oxygen vacancies present on the surface of the film and ionized oxygen vacancies present in the ZnO lattice (confirmed, respectively, by X-ray photoelectron and photoluminescence spectroscopies). Nonetheless, this may also be due to its increased crystallinity (confirmed by X-ray diffraction and photoluminescence spectroscopy), high area-to-volume ratio (confirmed by scanning electron microscopy images), high specific surface area (confirmed by Brunauer-Emmett-Teller measurements) as well as high mobility and carrier concentration (confirmed by Hall measurements). The sensor was highly selective to NO gas and showed notable stability as well as very short response and recovery times, which makes it eligible for the early detection of any indoor or outdoor NO gas leakages.

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