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Low-operating temperature and remarkably responsive methanol sensors using Pt-decorated hierarchical ZnO structure.

Nguyen Minh VuongDo Dai DuyHoang Nhat HieuVan Nghia NguyenNguyen Ngoc Khoa TruongHao Van BuiNguyen Van Hieu
Published in: Nanotechnology (2021)
Highly responsive methanol sensors working at low temperatures are developed using hierarchical ZnO nanorods decorated by Pt nanoparticles. The sensing materials are fabricated following a 3-step process: electrospinning of ZnO nanofibers, hydrothermal growth of hierarchical ZnO nanorods on the nanofibers and UV-assisted deposition of Pt nanoparticles. The morphology, structure and properties of the materials are examined by field-effect scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscope, x-ray diffraction, x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, UV-Vis absorption spectroscopy, and electrical measurements. The methanol sensing performance is investigated at different working temperatures in the range of 110 °C-260 °C. It is observed that the surface modification of the ZnO hierarchical nanorods by Pt nanoparticles results in a remarkable enhancement of the sensing response toward methanol, which can reach approximately 19 500 times higher than that of the unmodified ZnO nanorods-based sensor. In addition, this modification enables lower working temperatures with an optimum range of 140 °C-200 °C. Based on the achieved results, a methanol sensing mechanism of the Pt/ZnO structure is proposed.
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