4.6 Article

Room-temperature methane gas sensing properties based on in situ reduced graphene oxide incorporated with tin dioxide

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY A
Volume 5, Issue 22, Pages 11131-11142

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7ta01293d

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Funding

  1. Hong Kong Polytechnic University [1-99QP]

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We report on the relationship between the degree of reduction of graphene oxide (GO) and its room-temperature methane gas-sensing response by comparing four in situ reducing agents of GO: D-glucose, sodium borohydride, L-ascorbic acid and hydrazine hydrate. We found that gas sensing based on D-glucose and L-ascorbic acid had a higher gas response than that based on sodium borohydride and hydrazine hydrate because the residues contained oxygen functional groups. The poorly conductive GO was successfully reduced in situ by L-ascorbic acid to achieve high electrical conductivity and a high methane gas response. The incorporation of tin dioxide (SnO2) into the reduced GO (RGO) further increased the gas response by the p-n junction effect. The heterostructure of L-ascorbic acid-reduced RGO-SnO2 had the highest increase in methane response due to the synergistic effect between dehydroascorbic acid and the SnO2 surface. This was inferred from density functional theory calculations with self-consistently determined Hubbard U potentials (DFT+U). Compared with the current room-temperature methane sensing and fabrication technologies, the sensing technology reported here is cheaper to produce and more environmentally friendly while retaining the best sensitivity and wider sensing range.

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