4.7 Article

Nanostructured metal oxide semiconductors and composites for reliable trace gas sensing at room temperature

Journal

SURFACES AND INTERFACES
Volume 36, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.surfin.2022.102560

Keywords

Nanomaterial gas sensor; Nanocrystalline metal oxide; Room temperature gas sensor; Toxic gas sensor; Chemiresistive sensor

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Nanocrystalline metal oxide thin films have higher sensitivity for toxic gas sensing at lower temperatures than their bulk counterparts, allowing for the miniaturization of sensors for wearable and portable field trials without sacrificing sensitivity, but with improved selectivity. The properties of nanomaterials, such as size, morphology, geometry, preparation methods, and composition, play a crucial role in the sensor's sensitivity, selectivity, response time, and stability. However, the commercialization of nanostructured materials for toxic gas sensing has been hindered by reliability issues. This review focuses on the advances in room temperature operating sensors and their toxic gas sensing mechanism based on the design of nanostructured metal oxide semiconductors and heterostructures, highlighting their high sensitivity, selectivity, and reliability.
Nanocrystalline metal oxide thin films offer toxic gas sensing with higher sensitivity at lower temperature compared to their bulk counter parts leading to miniaturization of the sensors, making them wearable and easily portable for field trials without compromising on the sensitivity, but aided with improved selectivity. Nano-material of different size, morphology, geometry, preparation methods and composition play an important role in sensitivity, selectivity, response time and stability of the sensor. Although there are many reports about nano-structured materials for toxic gas sensing, they lack commercialization due to reliability issues. While some reviews have focused on toxic gas sensors based on macro and nanostructured materials which work at elevated temperatures and/or for a specific gas species, this review presents the systematic advances of room temperature operating sensors and their toxic gas sensing mechanism based on design of nanostructured metal oxide semi-conductors and heterostructures, with insights into their high sensitivity, selectivity and reliability. Recent studies on room temperature operating trace gas sensors (for NH3, H2S, H2, NO2 and SO2) based on nano-structured semiconducting materials and their composites in the chemiresistive mode are discussed. The roles of nanocrystallite size, morphology, surface adsorbed species, surface charge depletion layers and heterostructure interfaces of metal oxide semiconductors and their composite materials for reliable room temperature gas sensing are discussed. The article concludes with current status and future scope for optimizing the nanostructures and their heterostructure interfaces for specific gas sensing at room temperature with an understanding of the various physicochemical properties involved in enhancing the sensitivity, selectivity, stability and commercial viability.

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