4.6 Article

Detection of hydrogen at room temperature with catalyst-coated multiple ZnO nanorods

Journal

APPLIED PHYSICS A-MATERIALS SCIENCE & PROCESSING
Volume 81, Issue 6, Pages 1117-1119

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00339-005-3310-5

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A variety of different metal catalyst coatings (Pt, Pd, Au, Ag, Ti and Ni) deposited on multiple ZnO nanorods have been compared for their effectiveness in enhancing sensitivity for detecting hydrogen at room temperature. Pt-coated nanorods show a relative response of up to 8% in room-temperature resistance upon exposure to a hydrogen concentration in N-2 of 500 ppm. This is a factor of two larger than that obtained with Pd and more than an order of magnitude larger than that achieved with the remaining metals. The power levels for these sensors were low, similar to 0.4 mW for the responses noted above. Pt-coated ZnO nanorods easily detected hydrogen down to 100 ppm, with a relative response of 4% at this concentration after 10-min exposure. The nanorods show a return to their initial conductance upon switching back to a pure-air ambient with time constants of the order of a few minutes at room temperature. This slow response at room temperature is a drawback in some applications, but the sensors do offer low-power operation and ppm detection sensitivity.

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