4.7 Article

Nanogap Sensors Decorated with SnO2 Nanoparticles Enable Low-Temperature Detection of Volatile Organic Compounds

Journal

ACS APPLIED NANO MATERIALS
Volume 3, Issue 4, Pages 3337-3346

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsanm.0c00066

Keywords

nanogap sensor; gas sensing nanofabrication; tin oxide nanoparticles; dielectrophoresis; volatile organic compounds

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research [0001735.13-07-2017]

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In this work, an experiment was carried out in order to exploit the physical properties of an electrode structure with nanometric gap to enable the operation of MOX sensors at low temperature independently from the gas sensing properties of the adopted active material. The 100 nm-gap fingers gas sensor array was fabricated by using electron beam and UV optical lithography onto 4 '' silicon wafers (guaranteeing high process yield). SnO2 nanoparticles (NPs) synthesized by sol-gel/solvothermal method were trapped between the nanogap electrodes by dielectrophoresis, and scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy surface analysis were used to investigate the semiconducting NPs dispersion between the nanogap fingers. Nanogap SnO2 NPs based-sensor responses to acetone and ethanol in dry air carrier gas at near room temperatures were reported, discussed, and compared with those obtained from 5 mu m gap gas sensors (comparable to standard microgap commonly used in commercial sensors) functionalized with the same sensing material. The nanogap sensors exhibited better performance compared to the microgap ones, and larger response to ethanol than to acetone. For the lowest investigated gas concentration (10 ppm), the ethanol response (R-air/R-gas) increased with temperature from 2.56 at 50 degrees C to 17.91 to 100 degrees C, respectively from 1.56 to 3.92 for acetone. The best nanogap sensor responses were found at 100 degrees C with R-air/R-gas approximate to 38 for 150 ppm of ethanol, and R-air/R-gas approximate to 10 for 150 ppm of acetone. The experimental measurements confirmed the adopted theoretical model correlation between the sensor responses and the electrodes separation gap.

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