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General Synthesis of Mixed Semiconducting Metal Oxide Hollow Spheres with Tunable Compositions for Low-Temperature Chemiresistive Sensing.

Gen WangXinran ZhouJing QinYan LiangBingxi FengYonghui DengYongxi ZhaoJing Wei
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2019)
Metal oxide hollow spheres (MOHSs) with multicomponent metal elements exhibit intriguing properties due to the synergistic effects of different components. However, it remains a great challenge to develop a general method to synthesize multicomponent MOHSs due to the different hydrolysis and condensation rates of precursors for different metal oxides. Herein, we demonstrate a general strategy for the controllable synthesis of MOHSs with up to five metal elements by decomposition of metal-phenolic coordination polymers (MPCPs), which are prepared by chelation of tannic acid with various metal ions. After calcination to burn out the organic component and induce heterogeneous contraction of MPCPs, a series of MOHSs with multishell structure, high specific surface area (55-171 m2/g), and crystalline mesoporous framework are synthesized, including binary (Fe-Co, Ni-Zn, and Ni-Co oxides), ternary (Ni-Co-Mn and Ni-Co-Zn oxides), and quinary (Ni-Co-Fe-Cu-Zn oxides) MOHSs. The gas sensing nanodevices based on quinary MOHSs show much higher response (10.91) than those based on single component toward 50 ppm of ethanol at 80 °C with the response/recovery time of 85/160 s. The quinary oxides sensor also displays high selectivity toward ethanol against other interfering gases (e.g., methanol, formadehyde, toluene, methane, and hydrogen) and long-term stability (∼94.0% after 4 weeks), which are extremely favorable for practical applications.
Keyphrases
  • metal organic framework
  • heavy metals
  • transition metal
  • room temperature
  • drug delivery
  • carbon dioxide
  • high resolution
  • cancer therapy
  • aqueous solution
  • water soluble
  • anaerobic digestion
  • simultaneous determination