Ultrasensitive No2 Gas Sensor With Insignificant Nh3-Interference Based On A Few-Layered Mesoporous Graphene

SENSORS AND ACTUATORS B-CHEMICAL(2021)

Cited 24|Views12
No score
Abstract
Few-layered mesoporous graphene (FLMG) is employed as a sensing material to develop an innovative and high-sensitivity room temperature NO2 sensor through a simple manufacturing process. For this purpose, sensing material is optimized at 100 min by a high-energy milling process where natural graphite is used as a precursor: it is an inexpensive, sustainable and suitable active material. The large number of defects created and the enhanced degree of mesoporosity produced during the milling process determine the physical principles of operation of the designed device. NO2 gas sensing tests reveal an improved and selective performance with a change in resistance of similar to 16 % at 0.5 ppm under ultraviolet photo-activation, establishing a detection limit around similar to 25 ppb. Interestingly, the response of the developed sensor to humidity is independent in the measured range (0-33 % relative humidity at 25 degrees C) and the dependency to the presence of NH3 is rather poor as well (similar to 1.5 % at 50 ppm).
More
Translated text
Key words
Sub-ppm sensitivity, Gas selectivity, NO2 gas sensors, Few-layered mesoporous graphene, High-energy ball milling
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined