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Porous metal oxides as gas sensors

Semiconducting, nanoporous metal oxides are particulary interesting for application as gas sensors. Large surface-to-volume ratios and uniform porosity play important roles in this field of research.

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Porous metal oxides as gas sensors

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  1. Semiconducting, nanoporous metal oxides are particulary interesting for application as gas sensors. Large surface-to-volume ratios and uniform porosity play important roles in this field of research. Semiconducting metal oxides, such as SnO2, ZnO, WO3, or In2O3, are frequently utilized as gas sensors (so-called chemiresistors), e.g., for the detection of hazardous gases in factory plants, automobile emission, or air control in living spaces. The underlying principle is the chemical interaction of the gas species with the surface of the sensing material which results in changes of the electronic conductivity in the surface-near regions. Hence, a large surface-to-volume ratio is naturally a prerequisite for high sensitivity (i.e., change in conductance) of the sensor. This is one reason why porosity is particularly desired, and a variety of chemical synthesis methods is nowadays available for the generation of porous metal oxides, including sol-gel syntheses, chemical vapor deposition, spray pyrolysis, or precipitation. Apart from large specific surface areas, porosity offers an additional chance for improved gas-sensing properties, as the diffusion of the respective gas molecules is strongly correlated with the pore size and pore architecture. In particular, gas transport in nanoporous materials (i.e., with pore widths of a few nanometers) is basically governed by Knudsen diffusion, with the diffusion coefficient scaling linearly with the pore size. This is why the gas-sensing properties of porous materials, especially gas selectivity, can be substantially improved by creating uniform pore sizes with deliberate control of porosity by means of chemical synthesis. Porous metal oxides as gas sensors

  2. Three-electrode electrochemical sensor

  3. Figure 1 - Toxic Gas Sensor

  4. Sensing: CO + H2O CO2 + 2H+ + 2e- Counter: ½O2 + 2H+ + 2e- H2O And the overall reaction is: CO + ½O2 CO2

  5. Figure 1. The effect of particle size on gas sensitivity for an SnO2 oxide sensor exposed to CO and H2 gases MATERIALS ISSUES IN SEMICONDUCTOR OXIDE SENSORS Figure 1. The effect of particle size on gas sensitivity for an SnO2 oxide sensor exposed to CO and H2 gases.15 Figure 2. The effect of In2O3 grain size on sensor sensitivity to 1.0 ppm NO2 at 250�C.13

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