4.6 Article

UV-Light-Tunable p-/n-Type Chemiresistive Gas Sensors Based on Quasi-1D TiS3 Nanoribbons: Detection of Isopropanol at ppm Concentrations

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 22, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s22249815

Keywords

gas sensor; multisensor array; alcohol; room temperature; UV radiation; benzene; titanium trisulfide

Funding

  1. Russian Science Foundation [22-29-00793]
  2. RFBR [19-38-60034]
  3. Federal Ministry of Economics and Energy

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This study investigated the application of TiS3 crystals in chemiresistive gas sensors and found different responses of TiS3 to isopropanol under different conditions. By analyzing the signal from the entire sensor array, different gases can be distinguished. Heating reduces the performance of the sensor array.
The growing demand of society for gas sensors for energy-efficient environmental sensing stimulates studies of new electronic materials. Here, we investigated quasi-one-dimensional titanium trisulfide (TiS3) crystals for possible applications in chemiresistors and on-chip multisensor arrays. TiS3 nanoribbons were placed as a mat over a multielectrode chip to form an array of chemiresistive gas sensors. These sensors were exposed to isopropanol as a model analyte, which was mixed with air at low concentrations of 1-100 ppm that are below the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) permissible exposure limit. The tests were performed at room temperature (RT), as well as with heating up to 110 degrees C, and under an ultraviolet (UV) radiation at lambda = 345 nm. We found that the RT/UV conditions result in a n-type chemiresistive response to isopropanol, which seems to be governed by its redox reactions with chemisorbed oxygen species. In contrast, the RT conditions without a UV exposure produced a p-type response that is possibly caused by the enhancement of the electron transport scattering due to the analyte adsorption. By analyzing the vector signal from the entire on-chip multisensor array, we could distinguish isopropanol from benzene, both of which produced similar responses on individual sensors. We found that the heating up to 110 degrees C reduces both the sensitivity and selectivity of the sensor array.

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