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Ultrathin Boundary-Less SnO 2 Films with Surface-Activated Two-Dimensional Nanograins Enable Fast and Sensitive Hydrogen Gas Sensing
Fast and reliable semiconductor hydrogen sensors are crucially important for the large-scale utilization of hydrogen energy. One major challenge that hinders their practical application is the elevated temperature required, arising from undesirable surface passivation and grain-boundary-dominated el...
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Published in: | ACS sensors 2024-05, Vol.9 (5), p.2653-2661 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Citations: | Items that this one cites |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Fast and reliable semiconductor hydrogen sensors are crucially important for the large-scale utilization of hydrogen energy. One major challenge that hinders their practical application is the elevated temperature required, arising from undesirable surface passivation and grain-boundary-dominated electron transportation in the conventional nanocrystalline sensing layers. To address this long-standing issue, in the present work, we report a class of highly reactive and boundary-less ultrathin SnO
films, which are fabricated by the topochemical transformation of 2D SnO transferred from liquid Sn-Bi droplets. The ultrathin SnO
films are purposely made to consist of well-crystallized quasi-2D nanograins with in-plane grain sizes going beyond 30 nm, whereby the hydroxyl adsorption and grain boundary side-effects are effectively suppressed, giving rise to an activated (101)-dominating dangling-bond surface and a surface-controlled electrical transportation with an exceptional electron mobility of 209 cm
V
s
. Our work provides a new cost-effective strategy to disruptively improve the gas reception and transduction of SnO
. The proposed chemiresistive sensors exhibit fast, sensitive, and selective hydrogen sensing performance at a much-reduced working temperature of 60 °C. The remarkable sensing performance as well as the simple and scalable fabrication process of the ultrathin SnO
films render the thus-developed sensors attractive for long awaited practical applications in hydrogen-related industries. |
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ISSN: | 2379-3694 2379-3694 |
DOI: | 10.1021/acssensors.4c00508 |