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A New Strategy for Humidity Independent Oxide Chemiresistors: Dynamic Self-Refreshing of In2O3 Sensing Surface Assisted by Layer-by-Layer Coated CeO2 Nanoclusters

Authors
Yoon, Ji-WookKim, Jun-SikKim, Tae-HyungHong, Young JunKang, Yun ChanLee, Jong-Heun
Issue Date
17-8월-2016
Publisher
WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
Citation
SMALL, v.12, no.31, pp.4229 - 4240
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
SMALL
Volume
12
Number
31
Start Page
4229
End Page
4240
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/87803
DOI
10.1002/smll.201601507
ISSN
1613-6810
Abstract
The humidity dependence of the gas sensing characteristics of metal oxide semiconductors has been one of the greatest obstacles for gas sensor applications during the last fi ve decades because ambient humidity dynamically changes with the environmental conditions. Herein, a new and novel strategy is reported to eliminate the humidity dependence of the gas sensing characteristics of oxide chemiresistors via dynamic self-refreshing of the sensing surface affected by water vapor chemisorption. The sensor resistance and gas response of pure In2O3 hollow spheres signifi cantly change and deteriorate in humid atmospheres. In contrast, the humidity dependence becomes negligible when an optimal concentration of CeO2 nanoclusters is uniformly loaded onto In2O3 hollow spheres via layer-by-layer (LBL) assembly. Moreover, In2O3 sensors LBL-coated with CeO2 nanoclusters show fast response/ recovery, low detection limit (500 ppb), and high selectivity to acetone even in highly humid conditions (relative humidity 80%). The mechanism underlying the dynamic refreshing of the In2O3 sensing surfaces regardless of humidity variation is investigated in relation to the role of CeO2 and the chemical interaction among CeO2, In2O3, and water vapor. This strategy can be widely used to design high performance gas sensors including disease diagnosis via breath analysis and pollutant monitoring.
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