4.6 Article

Transition-metal decorated graphdiyne monolayer as an efficient sensor toward phosphide (PH3) and arsine (AsH3)

Journal

PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 24, Issue 43, Pages 26622-26630

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2cp02659g

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Office of the Ministry of Higher Education, Science, Research and Innovation, Thailand [RGNS63-005]
  2. Nanotechnology Centre (NANOTEC), NSTDA Ministry of Science and Technology (Thailand)
  3. Centre of Excellence Network, Integrated Nanotechnology Research Centre, Khon Kaen University (Thailand)

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This study investigates the sensing capabilities of Graphdiyne (GDY) and transition metal-decorated GDY for detecting arsine and phosphide gases. Fe-doped GDY is found to be highly selective and sensitive in detecting AsH3 and PH3, with promising potential for applications.
Graphdiyne (GDY), a two-dimensional (2D) carbon, uniquely possesses mixed sp-sp(2) hybridization, uniform nano-sized porous structure, semiconducting character, and excellent electrical conductivity. These features beneficially promote its applications in many fields, especially gas sensing. Based on density functional theory (DFT) and statistical thermodynamics, this study reports the sensing capabilities of pristine and selected transition metal (i.e., Fe, Sc, and Ti)-decorated GDY to detect environmentally hazardous arsine (AsH3) and phosphide (PH3) gases. We discover that Fe-doped GDY is a high-performance sensing material for detecting AsH3 and PH3 because of its selectivity and ultra-high sensitivity at the part-per-million (ppm) level. The presence of these gases induces measurably drastic changes in the electronic properties of Fe-doped GDY. The promising detection capabilities are fundamentally rooted in the appropriate chemical binding energies (i.e., ranging from -0.80 to -1.80 eV), which are basically rooted in the prominent orbital overlap among Fe-3d and As(P)-4p states. This study has raised the need to design efficient nanosensors using GDY-based materials.

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