4.8 Article

Green light-driven enhanced ammonia sensing at room temperature based on seed-mediated growth of gold-ferrosoferric oxide dumbbell-like heteronanostructures

Journal

NANOSCALE
Volume 12, Issue 36, Pages 18815-18825

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0nr05530a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51777215, 21876206]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities of China [18CX07010A]
  3. Open Fund of Key Laboratory of Marine Spill Oil Identification and Damage Assessment Technology, State Oceanic Administration of China [201801]
  4. Youth Innovation and Technology project of Universities in Shandong Province [2020KJC007]

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Since there is excellent synergy between heterostructures and noble metals due to their unique electro-optical and catalytic properties, the introduction of noble metals into metal oxide semiconductors has substantially improved the performance of gas sensors. However, most of the reported noble metal-metal oxide composites are generally prepared as simple hybrids; hence, there is lack of control over their structure, morphology and dimension. Herein, we report a seed-mediated growth of dumbbell-like Au-Fe(3)O(4)heteronanostructured gas sensors for ammonia detection under green light illumination, in which the particle sizes of Au and Fe(3)O(4)were readily tuned in a wide range. The ammonia gas-sensing performances of Au-Fe(3)O(4)heteronanostructures were greatly improved at room temperature by regulating their dimensions. In particular, the sensitivity improved by 30% while the response and recovery time shortened by 20 s and 50 s for the 7.5 nm Au-loaded Fe3O4-based sensor toward 5 ppm ammonia under 520 nm green light illumination as compared to that in the absence of light. This can be ascribed to the localized surface plasmon effect of Au and the Schottky junction formed at the interface between Au and Fe3O4. Interestingly, the Au-Fe(3)O(4)heteronanostructure exhibits a unique p-type to n-type reversible transition for ammonia detection due to the nature of Fe(3)O(4)NPs related to the trade-off between oxygen vacancies and electron transfer caused by ammonia adsorption. In addition, the calculation based on first-principle theory reveals enhanced adsorption capacities of Fe(3)O(4)for ammonia after Au-doping.

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