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Gas sensors using ordered macroporous oxide nanostructures

Authors
Dai, ZhengfeiLiang, TingtingLee, Jong-Heun
Issue Date
1-5월-2019
Publisher
ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
Citation
NANOSCALE ADVANCES, v.1, no.5, pp.1626 - 1639
Indexed
SCOPUS
Journal Title
NANOSCALE ADVANCES
Volume
1
Number
5
Start Page
1626
End Page
1639
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/65484
DOI
10.1039/c8na00303c
ISSN
2516-0230
Abstract
Detection and monitoring of harmful and toxic gases have gained increased interest in relation to worldwide environmental issues. Semiconducting metal oxide gas sensors have been considered promising for the facile remote detection of gases and vapors over the past decades. However, their sensing performance is still a challenge to meet the demands for practical applications where excellent sensitivity, selectivity, stability, and response/ recovery rate are imperative. Therefore, sensing materials with novel architectures and fabrication processes have been pursued with a flurry of research activity. In particular, the preparation of ordered macroporous metal oxide nanostructures is regarded as an intriguing candidate wherein ordered aperture sizes in the range from 50 nm to 1.5 mm can increase the chemical diffusion rate and considerably strengthen the performance stability and repeatability. This review highlights the recent advances in the fabrication of ordered macroporous nanostructures with different dimensions and compositions, discusses the sensing behavior evolution governed by structural layouts, hierarchy, doping, and heterojunctions, as well as considering their general principles and future prospects. This would provide a clear scale for others to tune the sensing performance of porous materials in terms of specific components and structural designs.
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